Bulletin Daily Paper 06/10/12

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Richard Nixon, according to the men whose reporting helped bring down the president, “was far worse than we thought.”

Local school clinics in danger of closing

WATERGATE

The Bulletin

By Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward The Washington Post

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Ethan Reed, 10, gets a physical exam from pediatric nurse practitioner Pam Lundy on Wednesday. Ethan’s mother, Charlotte Reed, said the school-based clinic at Ensworth Elementary was a great help because it was too late to schedule an exam with Ethan’s regular pediatrician before Boy Scout camp. “I had heard on the radio about the school-based health care, and we got Ethan in right away, and it was great,” Charlotte Reed said. “It was very thorough.” By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

onstruction has just begun

C

on a new Sisters school-

based clinic. But by the time it opens in 2013, the Deschutes County Health Services Department may be forced to consider shutting it down. Five school-based clinics opened in Deschutes County over the past decade. It began with La Pine, where a health center opened in 2004 at the campus where the elementary, middle and high

schools are located. Most recently, a clinic opened at Redmond High in 2011. There are also clinics at Bend’s Ensworth Elementary and Bend High, and M.A. Lynch Elementary in Redmond. Even as the clinics expand, there are already questions about their future. County officials said during budget discussions last month the school-based clinic program needs to reduce its dependence on money from the county general fund and come up with a longterm financial plan. The program draws 33 percent of its money from the general fund and 54 percent from the state, said Elaine Severson, the School-Based Health center program supervisor. The Health Services Department asked for $200,000 more from the county general fund to add staff at the Sisters clinic and a full-time supervisor for all

five clinics. But the county budget committee raised concerns about committing to that much in the long term and only gave the clinic program $8,000 to hire an on-call nurse as a full-time employee. The program will still hire a full-time supervisor, using contingency money. Health Services Director Scott Johnson told the county budget committee last month that it will become clear in the next two years whether the clinics can take advantage of new money available through federal health care reform to remain open. “Without that, we’d need to evaluate 24 months from now how many of the centers to keep open,” Johnson said. While there are questions about the funding, there is little question they are popular in local communities. See Clinics / A4

Just 4 in 10 Americans think their own actions affect the country’s energy problems.

We know how to save energy; we just don’t By Matthew Daly The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — When it comes to saving energy, people in the United States know that driving a fuel-efficient car accomplishes more than turning off the lights at home. But that doesn’t mean they’ll do it. A new survey shows that while most of those questioned understand effective ways to save energy, they have a hard time adopting them. Six in 10 say driving a more fuel-efficient car would save a large amount of energy, but only 1 in 4 says that’s easy to do, according to the poll by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. People also

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Officials say ‘super cop’ fears never materialized By Lauren Dake

Years later, a theory: Nixon was even worse As Sen. Sam Ervin completed his 20-year Senate career in 1974 and issued his final report as chairman of the Senate Watergate Committee, he posed this question: “What was Watergate?” Countless answers have been offered in the 40 years since mid-June ESSAY 1972 when a team of burglars wearing business suits and rubber gloves was arrested at 2:30 a.m. at the headquarters of the Democratic Party. Four days after, the Nixon White House offered its answer: “Certain elements may try to stretch this beyond what it was,” press secretary Ronald Ziegler scoffed, dismissing the incident as a “third-rate burglary.” History proved it was anything but. Two years later, Richard Nixon would become the first and only U.S. president to resign, his role in the criminal conspiracy to obstruct justice — the Watergate cover-up — definitively established. Another answer has since persisted, often unchallenged: the notion that the cover-up was worse than the crime. This idea minimizes the scale and reach of Nixon’s criminal actions. See Watergate / A6

TRIBAL POLICE

are skeptical of carpooling or installing better home insulation, rating them as effective but impractical. On the other end, 8 in 10 say they easily can turn off the lights when they leave a room, and 6 in 10 have no problem turning up the thermostat in summer or down in winter, although fewer than half think those easy steps save large amounts of energy. The public looks to large institutions for leadership in saving energy, believing that individuals alone can’t make much of a difference. But even those who support conservation don’t always practice it. See Energy / A3

AJ Mast / The Associated Press

Yes, Cindy Shriner’s Subaru Impreza gets nearly 30 mpg. But she still keeps her home at a balmy 73 degrees year-round. “I’m terrible,” the Lafayette, Ind., woman says.

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 109, No. 162, 48 pages, 7 sections

INDEX Business Books Classified

G1-6 F4-6 E1-8

Community C1-8 Crosswords C7, E2 Local News B1-6

Milestones Obituaries Opinion

The good-grade pill • Kids are using drugs not to get high, but to get higher SAT scores

in a neat line on the armrest. He leaned over, closed one nostril and snorted it. Throughout the parking lot, eight of his friends did the same thing. The drug was not cocaine By Alan Schwarz or heroin but Adderall, an New York Times News Service amphetamine prescribed for He steered into the attention deficit hyperhigh school parking lot, activity disorder that Inside clicked off the ignition the boy said he and his and scanned the scraps • A new age friends routinely shared of school of his recent weeks: to study late into the pranks, A7 night, focus during tests crinkled chip bags on the dashboard, soda and ultimately get the cups at his feet and on grades worthy of their the passenger seat, a rumpled prestigious high school in an SAT practice book whose affluent New York City suburb. owner had been told since The drug did more than just jolt fourth grade he was headed to them awake for the 8 a.m. SAT; the Ivy League. it gave them a tunnel focus Before opening the car door, tailor-made for the marathon the boy recalled recently, he of tests long known to make or twisted open a capsule of orbreak college applications. See Stimulants / A4 ange powder and arranged it

TODAY’S WEATHER C6 B4-5 F1-3

Sports D1-6 Stocks G4-5 TV & Movies C2

SALEM — Opponents feared that giving tribal police officers authority off the reservation would grant them more power than any other law enforcement in the agency and create “super cops.” Sheriffs lobbied lawmakers to reject Senate Bill 412, which passed last year. They voiced concerns about how tribes would follow public safety laws and pointed out that nontribal officers would not have authority on the reservation. But, since tribal police throughout the state were granted that authority in January, those concerns have not materialized. “The worry that they would be off the reservation, serving warrants in Bend or in Madras, has not occurred,” said Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins, who works closely with the Warm Springs Police Department. “They are too busy. It’s like me going into Bend to enforce the law. I don’t have time.” Warm Springs Police have made more than 40 arrests involving nontribal members on the reservation. Granting jurisdiction over nontribal members was an important part of the law for Warm Springs. It’s not a departure from what was taking place before, since the Warm Springs officers were deputized, or given arresting authority, by both the Wasco and Jefferson sheriff’s offices. “It puts it on the books, so if the (sheriff) administrations change, they can’t pull our deputization agreements,” said Stan Suenaga, the Warm Springs public safety general manager. See Tribes / A4

Sunny High 68, Low 40 Page B6

TOP NEWS EURO: Spanish bailout buys time, A3 JOBS: Picture is bleak for Oregon, G1


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

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A Romney election loss could cost him even more: an extra $5 million in taxes

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By Connie Cass The Associated Press

To see where the presidential candidates stand on taxing the rich, just look at how they’d tax themselves. Under his own proposal, Mitt Romney would pay half what he would under President Barack Obama’s tax plan. For a man of Romney’s means, that could save almost $5 million a year. For Obama, not as loaded as Romney but still well-off, losing re-election could provide a tax windfall. He’d save as much as $90,000 a year if Romney’s plan were enacted rather than his own tax-the-rich vision. Two nonprofit research groups, the liberal-leaning Citizens for Tax Justice and con-

servative-leaning Tax Foundation, did the calculations, based on the most recent completed tax returns released by the candidates. Compared with what they owed in April, both men would be dinged in 2013 under Obama’s proposal, along with other wealthy taxpayers. They could expect savings under Romney, depending on which tax breaks the former governor decides to oppose. Whether they go up or down, the candidates’ personal tax bills won’t make a dent in the nation’s trillion-dollar annual deficits, of course. But they illustrate a sticking point in the struggle to fix the nation’s finances: Just how much should affluent Americans pony up? Obama’s plan would hit

couples making more than $250,000 per year from several directions, raising their tax rate, dunning them more for investment income, and limiting their tax deductions. People with earnings from private equity management, like Romney, would lose a big tax break. And Obama would establish a rule to ensure that households taking in more than $1 million a year pay at least 30 percent in taxes. Obama’s health care law also raises Medicare taxes on the wealthy, especially big investors, starting in 2013. Romney wants to lower current tax rates for everyone by 20 percent. This benefits the wealthy most: Dropping the highest bracket from 35 percent to 28 percent, for example,

yields a much bigger savings for those at the top than lowering the 15 percent bracket to 12 percent brings for taxpayers in that group. Romney also would eliminate the much-despised alternative minimum tax, which hits the rich and some middle-class taxpayers, too. He wants to repeal Obama’s health care law and its taxes. Romney would pair his tax cuts with huge spending reductions eventually reaching $500 billion per year. Odds of either candidate getting his full plan through Congress after the Nov. 6 election are slim. Efforts to reform the tax code have been mired in partisan bickering for years. But pressure is building to do something.

How much would they owe? Here’s how the plans the two candidates have described so far would play out in 2013. The numbers are from calculations by Citizens for Tax Justice, corroborated by the Tax Foundation (although it would use slightly lower figures for Obama that exclude employer-paid Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes):

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Under Obama’s plan: Romney would pay 34 percent (assuming inflation-adjusted earnings of $23 million). Under Romney’s own plan: Romney would pay 13 percent (even lower than the 15 percent he estimated for 2011, which irritated critics who felt a multimillionaire investor should shoulder a higher rate than middle-class working families). The difference: Romney would pay the taxman $7.8 million vs. $3 million.

Under Obama’s own plan: Obama would pay 28 percent. (Like others taxed at earned income instead of investment rates, Obama’s bill wouldn’t swing as dramatically under the differing plans. He reported paying an effective tax rate of almost 21 percent on about $790,000 in income in 2011.) Under Romney’s plan: Obama would pay 18 percent. The difference: Obama would pay the taxman $248,000 vs. $158,000.

In the digital age, the Japanese stick with the fax

It’s Sunday, June 10, the 162nd day of 2012. There are 204 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS • Watch the 66th annual Tony Awards at 8 p.m. on CBS, with Neil Patrick Harris hosting. • France holds the first round of elections for the lower house of Parliament, which will determine whether President Francois Hollande’s Socialists or rival conservatives control the government. • Supporters of Henrique Capriles plan to march on Caracas as he signs up to run in October’s election against the ailing President Hugo Chavez.

IN HISTORY Highlights: In 1692, the first official execution resulting from the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts took place as Bridget Bishop was hanged. In 1935, Alcoholics Anonymous was founded in Akron, Ohio. In 1971, President Richard Nixon lifted a two-decade-old trade embargo on China. Ten years ago: Organized crime figure John Gotti died at a prison hospital in Springfield, Mo., at age 61. Five years ago: President George W. Bush was enthusiastically welcomed to Albania. At the French Open, Rafael Nadal defeated Roger Federer. HBO aired the final episode of “The Sopranos,” featuring an abrupt blackout ending that left fans intrigued, puzzled — and in some cases, infuriated. One year ago: In a stern rebuke, Defense Secretary Robert Gates warned in Brussels that the future of the historic NATO military alliance was at risk because of European penny pinching and a distaste for front-line combat.

BIRTHDAYS

Britain’s Prince Philip is 91. Actress Alexandra Stewart is fax machine almost daily, she its fax fascination, still tries. In most places, comput73. Actor Jurgen Prochnow is The Washington Post said, because she trusts it. As of March, according to ers (and by extension, email) 71. Country singer-songwriter TOKYO — In Japan’s busiMost international trade Japan’s Cabinet Office, fax quickly made the fax machine Thom Schuyler is 60. Former nesses and bureaucracies, in groups long ago stopped keep- machines could be found in 59 unnecessary. But in Japan, Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., home offices and hulking com- ing track of fax machine statis- percent of Japanese homes. that transition has not hapis 59. Former New York panies, the fax machine tics as the technology, Coming up with a similar pened. One reason is that governor-turned-media is thriving. Yes, the ODDITY in most places, grew number for the United States computers, at the outset, never commentator Eliot Spitzer is clunky device has fallen obsolete. Experts point would require a “polite fiction,” worked well for the Japanese 53. Singer Maxi Priest is 51. out of favor in so much out that fax statistics said Jonathan Coopersmith, a language. A mix of three syllaActress Kate Flannery is 48. of the world, a refuge for dust are hard to track even for those Texas A&M University associ- baries, with thousands of comRhythm-and-blues singer JoJo bunnies and stray cover sheets. who want to, because increas- ate professor and an expert on plex “kanji” ideograms, bedevis 41. Louisiana Gov. Bobby But it is humming here. ingly, the fax technology is the history of the facsimile. But iled early-age word-processJindal is 41. Actor Shane West Japanese still fax party in- folded into phones, Xerox ma- even in the early 1990s, only ing software. Until the early is 34. Country singer Lee Brice vitations, bank documents chines and computers. But sev- about 3 percent of U.S. homes 1990s, Japanese was nearly is 33. Olympic gold medal and shopping orders. Business eral of the world’s most promi- had the machines, he said. impossible to type. Even today, figure skater Tara Lipinski people call the fax a required nent fax machine makers — inIn terms of fax reliance, “I particularly for older Japanese is 30. Sasha Obama, the communication tool, used for cluding Brother, Sharp and don’t think any other nation people, it’s easier to write a letpresident’s daughter, is 11. vital messages, often in place Ricoh — are based in Japan. comes close to Japan,” Coo- ter by hand than with a stan— From wire reports of email. In the early hours So Japan, in a testament to persmith said. dard keyboard. of last year’s nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, operators informed the government of an emergency seawater injection by dialing up Tokyo and sending a fax. Japan’s continued fax devotion may be an endearing quirk, what with the country’s reputation as a high-tech playland, all bright lights and flawless ONE OF BEST INCOME FEELS LIKE A TREEHOUSE trains and chirping micro-dePROPERTIES AROUND IN THE WOODS! vices. But it may also represent Put your pencil to this one.4 units fully leased. Over Cedar home on acre lot with big windows, full a deeper sign of the nation’s in20,000 sq. ft. of leased building on over 3 acres. wrap around deck and private setting at the end ability to change and to accomPlenty of room to build more. Excellent location. of the road. $307,000 CALL JAYNEE BECK AT $1.195,000 CALL CANDY BOWERMAN AT modate global standards, even 541-480-0988. MLS: 201108190 541-410-3193. MLS: 201010803 as it cedes economic ground to Asian rivals such as China and South Korea. “It goes back to the famous theory that there are two Japans,” said Serkan Toto, a Tokyo-based consultant for Japanese Web, mobile and social gaming companies. “One is very efficient and highly productive. The other is where JUST COMPLETED! IMMACULATE IN AND OUT things are very slow and The brand new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home feaLocated in one of the nicest sections of Deschutes there’s barely any innovation. River Woods on the canal. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, tures Alder cabinetry, stainless appliances and 1560 sq. ft. home in lovely treed setting. $188,500 Information technology is in extensive laminate flooring. Fully fenced and CALL DONNA JOHNSON AT 541-977-6708. that second basket.” landscaped. Great value. $162,000. CALL KIM MLS: 2011203061 With their traditional reverWARNER AT 541-410-2475 MLS: 201200642 ence for paper and handwriting, the Japanese still see use for the analog world. 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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Spain bank bailout buys time for euro

FIGHTING ESCALATES IN SYRIAN CAPITAL

The Associated Press The plan to bail out Spain’s banks with up to $125 billion in aid buys European policymakers time to try to save the euro and eases deep fears in global financial markets. The deterioration of Spain’s banks and the pressing need for a rescue was threatening to bankrupt its government. That would likely cause far more pain for Europe than the financial messes in Greece, Portugal and Ireland, smaller economies that have received bailouts. Investors need all the reassurance they can get. They’re already worried

U.N. mission via The Associated Press

A U.N. observer passes a charred bus on a Damascus street Saturday. While Syrian troops shelled the southern city of Daraa early Saturday, killing at least 17, residents here spoke about a night of shooting and explosions in the worst violence Syria’s capital has seen since the uprising against President Bashar Assad’s regime began 15 months ago. The nearly 12 hours of fighting in Damascus suggested a new boldness among armed rebels, who previously kept a low profile in the capital. It also showed a willingness by the regime to unleash in the capital the sort of elevated force against restive neighborhoods it has used to crush opponents elsewhere. For

the first time in the uprising, witnesses said, regime tanks opened fire in the city’s streets, with shells slamming into residential buildings. The latest escalations in different parts of Syria are another blow to U.N. peace efforts. And they seem to be worrying Syria’s most powerful ally, Russia. “The situation in Syria is becoming more alarming,� Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Saturday at a news conference. He said two recent attacks had put Russians in Damascus in danger. But Russia, a supporter of the U.N. mission in Syria and a member of the U.N. Security Council, “will not sanction the use of force,� Lavrov reiterated.

pital, Philip appeared in Bulletin wire reports LONDON — Britgood spirits, waving at ain’s Prince Philip, the cameras after shakthe husband of Queen ing hands with hospital Elizabeth II, was restaff. Six months ago, leased from the hos- Philip Philip suffered heart pital Saturday, the problems and had a queen’s official birthday and coronary stent fitted. He has one day before his own. been married to the queen for The prince, 91 today, had almost 65 years. spent five nights there after being admitted with a bladder infection, missing part of the queen’s Diamond Jubilee celebration. As he left London’s private King Edward VII hos-

No easy exit for an infamous vessel Los Angeles Times

ALANG, India — For the ship formerly known as the Exxon Valdez, even sailing quietly into the sunset is proving difficult. Now called the Oriental Nicety, it’s floating off India in a kind of high-seas limbo as a court decides whether the vessel that dumped 11 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska’s unspoiled Prince William Sound in 1989 can be hacked apart in this forlorn graveyard for once-mighty ships. Local environmentalists have petitioned the High Court in the western state of Gujarat to block its entry pending an

Energy Continued from A1 Cindy Shriner, a retired teacher from Lafayette, Ind., buys energy-efficient light bulbs and her 2009 Subaru Impreza gets nearly 30 miles per gallon on the highway. Still, she keeps her house at about 73 degrees year-round, despite government recommendations to turn thermostats to 68 degrees in winter and 78 degrees in summer. “I’m terrible,� Shriner, 60, said in an interview. “In all honesty, we have extreme weather in all seasons� in Indiana, she said, and her thermostat settings keep her comfortable. Her parents recently qualified for a grant under the economic stimulus law that paid for a new furnace and insulation, Shriner said. She said such programs are important to improve energy conservation. Nearly two-thirds of the 1,008 adults surveyed nationwide look to the energy industry to show the way toward energy conservation, and nearly 6 in 10 say the government should play a leading role. Democrats, college graduates and people younger than 50 are the most likely to hold industry responsible for increasing energy savings. The poll shows that just 4 in 10 questioned think their own actions can significantly affect the country’s energy problems. Some 15 percent say individual actions make “a very large difference,� while 7 percent say individual action makes no difference at all. Indeed, on some energy topics, people are in the dark. Only 1 in 3 reports knowing a lot or a great deal about the government’s Energy Star product labels, which are meant to help consumers choose energy-efficient appliances and other products. Even fewer, 25 percent, report detailed knowledge about fuel-efficiency standards for cars. Not even 20 percent know a lot or a great deal about rebates for energy-saving prod-

onboard inspection for toxic chemicals, including mercury, arsenic and asbestos. Environmentalists acknowledge it’s probably no more toxic than so many other ships recycled at Alang, a city whose coastline was once edged with forest and is now lined with about 175 ramshackle yards pulling vessels apart. But they say the standoff focuses attention on India’s lax environmental, labor and safety standards governing the billion-dollar ship-breaking industry. “The ex-Exxon Valdez is a test case for the robustness of India’s regulatory framework,� activist Gopal Krishna of ToxicsWatch Alliance wrote

in a court filing. In an industry that benefits from cheap labor, “they want to drop the problem on the poor people of India,� said Jim Puckett, Seattle-based head of the Basel Action Network activist group. The Oriental Nicety’s most recent owner, Alang-based scrap company Priya Blue, says it is confident of a favorable ruling soon on the ship’s fate. If not, or if the legal limbo drags on too long, it may divert the ship to Bangladesh or Pakistan. “We are 110 percent sure the ship is safe,� said Sanjay Mehta, a partner at Priya Blue. “The spill happened a long time back. It’s not hazardous.�

$IBMMFOHFT UP DIBOHJOH FOFSHZ VTF Many Americans say they are taking steps to consume less energy but see obstacles to changing some habits, according to an AP-NORC Center poll. How difficult would it be for you and your family to make the following changes in the next 12 months? Very difficult

Moderately difficult

Not difficult

Buying a more fuel efficient car

Already doing this

Carpooling Installing more/better insulation in your home

Replacing old appliances Turning up thermostat to 78 degrees in summer

Turning down thermostat to 65 degrees in winter

Turning lights off when you leave the room

4PVSDF "1 /03$ $FOUFS GPS 1VCMJD "GGBJST QPMM PG BEVMUT DPOEVDUFE .BSDI "QSJM NBSHJO PG FSSPS ™ QFSDFOUBHF QPJOUT .BZ OPU FRVBM QFSDFOU EVF UP SPVOEJOH 5IF "TTPDJBUFE 1SFTT

ucts, home renovation tax credits or home energy audits. About 6 in 10 people cite lack of knowledge about energy-saving products as a major reason they don’t do more to conserve. Jennifer Celestino, 29, of Buffalo, N.Y., said she might do more if she knew how much energy she was using compared with her neighbors. “If you had information that says, ‘Hey, your household uses more than the typical house in your ZIP code,’ that would get my attention,� said Celestino, a workforce analyst at an insurance company. Lacking hard data, nearly half of those questioned say they use somewhat or a lot less energy than others in their community, while only 9 percent think their consumption is above average. Overall energy use by people in the United States is four times the world average, according to the Energy Information Administration, but Americans use less energy per person than people in countries

such as Canada, Norway and Iceland. Average energy use by Americans declined by about 9 percent from 2005 to 2009, largely because of increased efficiency of appliances and machinery, and the economic downturn, the EIA said. Dori Spaulding, a stay-athome mom from Niceville, Fla., worries about high energy bills, particularly in the summer, but says her hometown “is a hot place and we have small kids.� Her home windows are not as efficient as they should be, Spaulding said, but they aren’t broken and “I don’t have 10 grand to replace the windows.� Spaulding, 33, said she and her husband, an Air Force pilot, have considered buying a hybrid or electric car. But for now they drive a minivan and station wagon. She said she needs the room for her two children and the triathlon club she leads, but acknowledged that the vehicles fit her lifestyle. “I think that Americans want what we want, and we want it now,� she said.

“This move ‌ suggests that European leaders are finally beginning to take significant actions to ease the intensifying pressure on the euro zone’s peripheral economiesâ€? such as Spain and Portugal, says Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University. The exact amount Spain needs won’t be clear until outside accountants complete an audit of its banks by June 21. Unlike the other European countries to receive bailouts, Spain did not have to agree to deeper cuts in its budget to secure the help. More austerity likely would have pushed Spain, already suffering from near-25 percent unemployment, deeper into recession.

Prince Philip out of hospital

EXXON VALDEZ

By Mark Magnier

about what will happen when Greek voters go to the polls June 17. The Greeks could elect a government that will refuse to live up the terms of a $170 billion bailout. That could force the country to exit the euro — an outcome that would raise fears that another, bigger European country might be next. Spain on Saturday asked the 17 countries that use the euro currency for money to rescue its banking system. European officials responded by offering to provide up to $125 billion to rebuild Spanish banks’ capital, their financial bulwark against losses on bad loans. Europe’s troubles are causing economic problems for the U.S. and developing countries.

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A4

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Stimulants Continued from A1 “Everyone in school either has a prescription or has a friend who does,� the boy said. At high schools across the country, pressure over grades and competition for college admissions are encouraging students to abuse prescription stimulants, according to interviews with students, parents and doctors. Pills that have been a staple in some college and graduate school circles are going from rare to routine in many academically competitive high schools, where teenagers say they get them from friends, buy them from student dealers or fake symptoms to their parents and doctors to get prescriptions. Of the more than 200 students, school officials, parents and others contacted for this article, about 40 agreed to share their experiences. Most students spoke on the condition that they be identified by only a first or middle name or not at all, out of concern for their college prospects or their school systems’ reputations — and their own. “It’s throughout all the private schools here,� said DeAnsin Parker, a New York psychologist who treats many adolescents from affluent neighborhoods. “It’s not as if there is one school where this is the culture. This is the culture.� Observed Gary Boggs, a special agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration: “We’re seeing it all across the United States.� The DEA lists prescription stimulants like Adderall and Vyvanse (amphetamines) and Ritalin and Focalin (methylphenidates) as Class 2 controlled substances — the same as cocaine and morphine — because they rank among the most addictive substances that have a medical use. (By comparison, the long-abused anti-anxiety drug Valium is in the lower Class 4.) So they carry high legal risks, too, as few teenagers appreciate that merely giving a friend an Adderall or Vyvanse pill is the same as selling it and

Clinics Continued from A1 Kids and their families do not need health insurance to receive treatment at the clinics, which bill on a sliding scale. From June 2010 through May 31, 2012, there were 4,962 patient visits to clinics across the county, Anne Olson, with the Health Services Department, wrote in an email. Charlotte Reed took her 10-year-old son Ethan to the school clinic at Ensworth Elementary in Bend on Wednesday because it was too late to schedule a physical examination with Ethan’s regular pediatrician before he went to Boy Scout camp. “It was probably as good, if not better, than his pediatrician’s office,� Reed said of the exam. A nurse also gave Reed a booster shot against pertussis, or whooping cough, which reached the level of an epidemic in Washington earlier this year. Reed said she “kind of felt weird going in, because we do have insurance,� but she knows more scouts and their families are also planning to get exams at the clinic. The school clinics do bill insurance plans when patients have coverage. County health officials have credited the centers with increasing students’ access to

Tribes Continued from A1 Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blanton, who is president of the Oregon State Sheriffs’ Association, called the office of Sen. Chris Telfer, R-Bend, when the vote on this bill was approaching. He encouraged the senator to cast a no vote, which she did. “Frankly, anytime there is something new being considered, there is always the fear about the unwritten intent of the bill or policy,� Blanton said. “But Senate Bill 412 has not been like initially thought. There are no issues or concerns.� Blanton said the law has improved the relationship with the neighboring Warm Springs Police Department more than he could have anticipated. Warm Springs detectives recently joined the Central Oregon narcotics team of

can be prosecuted as a felony. While these medicines tend to calm people with ADHD, those without the disorder find that just one pill can jolt them with the energy and focus to push through all-night homework binges and stay awake during exams afterward. “It’s like it does your work for you,� said William, a recent graduate of the Birch Wathen Lenox School in New York City. But abuse of prescription stimulants can lead to depression and mood swings (from sleep deprivation), heart irregularities and acute exhaustion or psychosis during withdrawal, doctors say. Little is known about the long-term effects of abuse of stimulants among the young. Drug counselors say that for some teenagers, the pills eventually become an entry to the abuse of painkillers and sleep aids. “Children have prefrontal cortexes that are not fully developed, and we’re changing the chemistry of the brain. That’s what these drugs do,� said Paul Hokemeyer, a family therapist in Manhattan. “It’s one thing if you have a real deficiency — the medicine is really important to those people — but not if your deficiency is not getting into Brown.� The number of prescriptions for ADHD medications dispensed for young people ages 10 to 19 has risen 26 percent since 2007, to almost 21 million yearly, according to IMS Health, a health care information company — a number that experts estimate corresponds to more than 2 million individuals. But there is no reliable research on how many high school students take stimulants as a study aid. Doctors and teenagers from more than 15 schools across the nation with high academic standards estimated that the portion of students who do so ranges from 15 to 40 percent. “They’re the A students, sometimes the B students, who are trying to get good grades,� said one senior at Lower Merion High School in Ardmore, a Philadelphia suburb, who said he makes hundreds of dollars

immunizations, and Severson said much of the clinics’ work deals with prevention. For example, a respiratory therapist works with kids who have asthma in La Pine and Redmond so they can better manage the disease. This helps the students miss fewer school days, Severson said. Currently, the county shoulders the cost for many of these preventive services. But as Oregon implements provisions of the federal health care overhaul, more money could become available for this work, Severson said. The clinics also help groups such as uninsured teenagers who would otherwise be unlikely to seek health care. Health issues that teens deal with include concussions, suicidal thoughts, obesity and alcohol and drug use, Severson said. School-based clinics statewide have bipartisan support among state lawmakers, Severson said, and this protected them from budget cuts that hit many other social service programs. When the county hires a full-time program supervisor, Severson, who works part-time, will focus on creating a plan for the financial future of the clinics in Deschutes County. It includes obtaining a certification for the clinics that will allow them to receive

officers from the tri-county area. Combining resources, he said, is helping everyone improve public safety. “What we’ve done is truly cutting-edge,� he said of the law change. Public safety has improved, Blanton said, and the tribe’s sovereignty has been protected. “Other states don’t have this type of relationship,� he said. Eriks Gabliks, the director of the state’s Department of Public Safety Standards and Training, said that for tribal police to qualify for off-reservation jurisdiction under the law, they must meet the requirements that state police officers do. All officers must pass a background check and complete state training. “They are basically telling us all tribal police officers meet state standards,� Gabliks said. Brad Kneaper, who is the

5IF ATUVEZ ESVHT QPQVMBS BNPOH IJHI TDIPPM TUVEFOUT Stimulant medications prescribed for children with ADHD are being abused by high school students wanting to study late into the night and stay focused during exams. Below are characteristics of the drugs’ ďŹ ve most popular brands, which (along with their generic equivalents) make up the vast majority of the 21 million stimulant prescriptions written in 2011 for patients ages 10 through 19. AMPHETAMINES

METHYLPHENIDATES

Adderall XR

Vyvanse

Concerta

Focalin XR

Ritalin

1.6 million

4.1 million

2.6 million

1.8 million

263,000

MANUFACTURER

Shire

Shire

Janssen

Novartis

Novartis

YEAR INTRODUCED

2001

2007

2000

2005

1955

The most popular “study drug� among high school students, it lasts eight to 12 hours, and its generic equivalent is less expensive than others. Small beads in capsules can be crushed and snorted. It increases dopamine levels in the brain but also can affect sleep patterns.

A popular new drug for ADHD, it is the most expensive because there is no generic available, so some insurance plans will not cover it. It is very similar to Adderall, but absorption can be more smooth. It can also suppress appetite more drastically than Adderall.

Very difďŹ cult to crush into powder and snort, so it is popular among psychiatrists who are concerned a patient might abuse or sell it. It can provide a short-term boost and last up to 16 hours — drastically affecting sleep. No generic is available, so it can be more expensive.

Effects can last eight to 12 hours. It is methylphenidates’ answer to Vyvanse, because no generic is available, making it more expensive. Different formulation can bring a mix of side effects like headaches, loss of appetite and jitters.

Students like its relatively temporary effects (three to four hours) that typically will not interrupt sleep. Length of time on market makes it very inexpensive. Some students report worse jitters after snorting and prefer Adderall or Vyvanse for a quick, longlasting jolt.

PRESCRIPTIONS FOR AGES 10-19 (2011)

DESCRIPTION

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a week selling prescription drugs, usually priced at $5 to $20 per pill, to classmates as young as freshmen. “They’re the quote-unquote good kids, basically.� An annual survey financed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, “Monitoring the Future,� reports that abuse of prescription amphetamines by 10th- and 12th-graders nationally has actually dipped from the 1990s and is remaining relatively steady at about 10 percent. A spokesman for Shire, which manufactures Vyvanse and Adderall’s extended-release capsules, said studies had shown no link between prescribed use of those drugs and later abuse. But some experts note that

funding associated with health care reform. Johnson said the question remains whether the county is the best entity to operate these clinics from a business perspective. Local federally qualified health clinics could also take over or collaborate with the county, Johnson said. At county budget committee discussions last month, Bruce Barrett, a citizen member of the budget committee, said the county should not spend additional money on the clinics. County Commissioner Tony DeBone also questioned spending on the program. “I had some heartburn about how many services the government is providing,â€? DeBone said. Commissioner Tammy Baney said Friday the clinics provide important services, but they just need a concrete financial plan. “The best way to provide the service is where the service is needed, which is in the community,â€? Baney said. “What we don’t have is a sustainable business plan that shows we’re not just investing in something that ultimately we may need to close. ‌ Right now, we don’t have a plan in place that shows where we will be in the next three years.â€? — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

chief of police with the Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Police Department, said not much has changed since the law’s passage. Kneaper, a former Oregon State Police officer, said it always struck him as strange to one day have authority to make arrests anywhere, and the next day not. He could never wrap his head around the concept of “super cops.� “We’re not out to take over anyone’s jurisdictional territory,� he said. Not all of the tribes like the idea of the bill, though. The Burns Paiute Tribe will not apply with the Department of Public Safety for fear it infringes on its sovereignty. “They didn’t agree with giving up any sovereignty whatsoever,� said Mark Creighton, the tribe’s police chief. — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ldake@bendbulletin.com

the national survey does not focus on the demographic where they believe such abuse is rising steadily — students at high-pressure high schools — and also that many teenagers barely know that what they often call “study drugs� are in fact illegal amphetamines. Douglas Young, a spokesman for the Lower Merion School District, said prescription stimulant abuse was covered in various student-wellness initiatives as well as in the 10th-grade health curriculum. Young expressed frustration that many parents seemed oblivious to the problem. “It’s time for a serious wakeup call,� Young said. “Straight A’s and high SAT scores look great on paper, but they aren’t

reflective measures of a student’s health and well-being. We need to better understand the pressures and temptations, and ultimately we need to embrace new definitions of student success. For many families and communities, that’s simply not happening.� The Sklar family lives near the top of a daunting hill in Ardsley, N.Y. At their kitchen table after school last month, Dodi Sklar listened as her ninth-grade son, Jonathan, described how some classmates already abused stimulants — long before SATs and college applications. An accomplished student who said he would never join them, Jonathan described the ease with which he could.

“There’s no way you’d notice — that’s why so many kids are doing it,� he told his mother. “I could say I’m going for a run, call someone I know who does it, get some pills from them, take them, come home and work. Just do it. You’d be just glad that I was studying hard.� His mother sighed. “As a parent you worry about driving, you worry about drinking, you worry about all kinds of health and mental issues, social issues,� she said. “Now I have to worry about this, too? Really? This shouldn’t be what they need to do to get where they want to.� — The New York Times interviewed hundreds of students, parents and school officials for this article. Read the full version at www.nytimes.com.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A5

What happens to all that excess military gear? By Walter Pincus The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — What will the Pentagon do with about 6,000 excess MRAPs (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles) after the major Army and Marine Corps combat elements leave Afghanistan at the ANALYSIS end of 2014? The MRAPs are worth more than $4 billion. Perhaps just as important is where will the Army and Marines get the funds to operate, maintain and replace the roughly 20,000 they have tentatively decided to keep as standard equipment? MRAPs are the family of heavily armored vehicles with unique V-shaped hulls that were rapidly designed and produced beginning in 2006 to protect against improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, which have been the main cause of deaths and injuries to U.S. and coalition troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. In Afghanistan from 2009 to 2010, the predecessor personnel carrier, the HMMWV, or Humvee, had an occupancy death rate of 80 percent when hit by IEDs, according to a January 2011 report by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). The MRAP’s fatality rate during the same period was 15 percent, a result that may have saved dozens of lives a month, the CRS said. In the process of rushing these vehicles to the battlefield, the Pentagon used five manufacturers and created 25 versions that fit into three categories — those for urban combat that can carry seven soldiers; those for security, convoy escort or ambulance duty that can take up to 11 people; and those used to clear mines or IEDs that could handle 13 people. When the main fighting switched to Afghanistan, about 8,000 of a newer, lighter version called the All Terrain Vehicle (M-ATV) were purchased. They were designed for that country’s more rugged, mountainous areas, according to the CRS report. Through 2011, the Defense Department bought and fielded more than 27,000 MRAPs, according to the Government Accountability Office, which on March 31 sent Congress a briefing on how the Army and Marines are trying to determine what equipment designed specifically for fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan should be retained and what should be discarded. MRAPs, in Pentagon jargon, are nonstandard equipment — vehicles that were not found in core Army and Marine units before these wars. The more than $45 billion spent on MRAPs during the past six years came out of Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) accounts, which are supplementary funds appropriated by Congress to support war-fighting. The funding didn’t come from the services’ core budgets. The cost of individual MRAPs has varied, but an average of $1.54 million a copy has been used in Pentagon budget documents. The MRAPs that the Army and Marine Corps decide to keep will have to be paid for out of their core budgets, which are already under pressure. Meanwhile, they are requesting OCO funds in fiscal 2013 to support their MRAP programs, according to the GAO. For example, the Army is seeking more than $900 million in OCO funds to repair and upgrade the vehicles. An additional $40 million would be used to store MRAPs as war reserves, pre-positioned in holding areas, according to budget material sent to Congress. The Army plans to keep about 18,000 MRAPs, according to the GAO. The Marine Corps has tentatively decided to keep 800 MRAPs and 300 M-ATVs, according to congressional sources. How to handle nonstandard equipment is an issue bigger than MRAPs, however. For example, as part of its post-Iraq-Afghanistan transition work, the Army since 2004 has reviewed 409 equipment systems, according to the GAO. Of those, only 11 percent have been determined to be useful for the future, including MRAPs. The Marine Corps gener-

ally funds its nonstandard equipment through its Urgent Needs Process and, after two years, makes a decision on continued funding. Among the nonstandard items is a category the Army refers to as “White” equipment — gear that was contractor-

purchased but governmentowned. This primarily involves items such as “fire trucks and ambulances as well as equipment used for laundry and food service, construction, power generation and distribution and transportation,” according to a 2010 Army directive. In

Iraq, as of March 2011, White equipment represented about $2.5 billion, or 36.5 percent, of all Army equipment remaining in-country. A long-standing program allows U.S. state and local governments to seek surplus White equipment. They are

required to pay only transportation expenses. But those costs are discouraging when the surplus equipment is in Iraq, Afghanistan or Kuwait. The GAO’s 2011 report noted that only $6 million worth of such items had been distributed to such entities as of April

2011. Most public talk about defense matters is focused on the spending for new weapons for the next war. But in these belttightening times, it is worth thinking about what happens to the billions of dollars of equipment already used.


A6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Watergate Continued from A1 Ervin’s answer to his own question hints at the magnitude of Watergate: “To destroy, insofar as the presidential election of 1972 was concerned, the integrity of the process by which the President of the United States is nominated and elected.” Yet Watergate was far more than that. At its most virulent, Watergate was a brazen and daring assault, led by Nixon himself, against the heart of American democracy: the Constitution, our system of free elections, the rule of law. Today, much more than when we first covered this story, an abundant record provides unambiguous answers and evidence about Watergate and its meaning. This record has expanded continuously over the decades with the transcription of hundreds of hours of Nixon’s secret tapes, adding detail and context to the hearings in the Senate and the House; the trials and guilty pleas of about 40 Nixon associates who went to jail; and the memoirs of Nixon and his deputies. Such documentation makes it possible to trace the president’s personal dominance over a massive campaign of political espionage, sabotage and other illegal activities against his real or perceived opponents. In the course of his 51⁄2-year presidency, beginning in 1969, Nixon launched and managed five successive and overlapping wars — against the antiVietnam War movement, the media, the Democrats, the justice system and, finally, history itself. All reflected a mindset and a pattern of behavior that were uniquely and pervasively Nixon’s: a willingness to disregard the law for political advantage, and a quest for dirt and secrets about his opponents as an organizing principle of his presidency. Long before the Watergate break-in, gumshoeing, burglary, wiretapping and political sabotage had become a way of life in the Nixon White House. What was Watergate? It was Nixon’s five wars.

The war against the left This was Nixon’s first war. The president considered it subversive and thought it constrained his ability to prosecute the war in Southeast Asia on his terms. In 1970, he approved the top-secret Huston Plan, authorizing the CIA, the FBI and military intelligence units to intensify electronic surveillance of individuals identified as “domestic security threats.” The plan called for, among other things, intercepting mail and lifting restrictions on “surreptitious entry” — that is, break-ins or “black bag jobs.” Thomas Charles Huston, the White House aide who devised the plan, informed Nixon that it was illegal, but the president approved it regardless. It was not formally rescinded until FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover objected — not on principle, but because he considered those types of activities the FBI’s turf. Undeterred, Nixon remained fixated on such operations. In a memorandum dated March 3, 1970, presidential aide Patrick Buchanan wrote to Nixon about what he called the “institutionalized power of the left concentrated in the foundations that succor the Democratic Party.” Of particular concern was the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank with liberal leanings. On June 17, 1971 — one year to the day before the Watergate break-in — Nixon met in the Oval Office with his chief of staff, H.R. “Bob” Haldeman, and national security adviser Henry Kissinger. At issue was a file about President Lyndon Johnson’s handling of the 1968 bombing halt in Vietnam. “You can blackmail Johnson on this stuff, and it might be worth doing,” Haldeman said, according to the tape of the meeting. “Yeah,” Kissinger said, “but Bob and I have been trying to put the damn thing together for three years.” They wanted the complete story of Johnson’s actions. “Huston swears to God there’s a file on it at Brookings,” Haldeman said. “Bob,” Nixon said, “now you remember Huston’s plan? Implement it. … I mean, I want it implemented on a thievery basis. God damn it, get in and get those files. Blow the safe and get it.” For reasons still unclear, the break-in apparently was not carried out.

The war on the press Nixon’s second war was waged ceaselessly against the news media, which was reporting more insistently on the

Las Vegas or New York bookmakers, and empaneling a new grand jury so everyone could plead the Fifth Amendment or claim memory failure. Finally, they decided to send Mitchell on an emergency fundraising mission.

The war on history

Washington Post file photo

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein — pictured in the Washington Post newsroom in 1972, the year of the Watergate break-in — are also the co-authors of two Watergate books, “All the President’s Men” and “The Final Days.” The reporters reunited almost 40 years later to write an essay for the Post, which is excerpted here. Read the full version at www.washingtonpost.com.

faltering Vietnam War and the effectiveness of the anti-war movement. Although Hoover thought he had shut down the Huston Plan, it was in fact implemented by high-level Nixon deputies. A “Plumbers” unit and burglary team were set up under the direction of White House counsel John Ehrlichman and an assistant, Egil Krogh, and led by the operational chiefs of the future Watergate burglary, ex-CIA operative Howard Hunt and former FBI agent G. Gordon Liddy. Hunt was hired as a consultant by Nixon political aide Charles Colson, whose take-no-prisoners sensibility matched the president’s. An early assignment was to destroy the reputation of Daniel Ellsberg, who had provided the Pentagon Papers, a secret history of the Vietnam War, to the media in 1971. Publication of the documents in The New York Times, The Washington Post and eventually other newspapers had sent Nixon into rants and rages, recorded on his tapes, about Ellsberg, the anti-war movement, the press, Jews, the American left and liberals in Congress — all of whom he conflated. Though Ellsberg was already under indictment and charged with espionage, the team headed by Hunt and Liddy broke into the office of his psychiatrist, seeking information that might smear Ellsberg and undermine his credibility in the antiwar movement. “You can’t drop it, Bob,” Nixon told Haldeman on June 29, 1971. “You can’t let the Jew steal that stuff and get away with it. You understand?” In response to suspected leaks to the press about Vietnam, Kissinger had ordered FBI wiretaps in 1969 on the telephones of 17 journalists and White House aides, without court approval. Many news stories based on the purported leaks questioned progress in the American war effort, further fueling the anti-war movement. In a tape from the Oval Office on Feb. 22, 1971, Nixon said, “In the short run, it would be so much easier, wouldn’t it, to run this war in a dictatorial way, kill all the reporters and carry on the war.”

The war against Democrats In Nixon’s third war, he took the weapons in place — the Plumbers, wiretapping and burglary — and deployed them against the Democrats challenging his re-election. John Mitchell, Nixon’s campaign manager and confidante, met with Liddy at the Justice Department in early 1972, when Mitchell was attorney general. Liddy presented a $1 million plan for spying and sabotage during the upcoming presidential campaign, codenamed “Gemstone.” According to the Senate Watergate report and Liddy’s 1980 autobiography, he used multicolored charts prepared by the CIA to describe elements of the plan. Operation Diamond would neutralize anti-war protesters with mugging squads and kidnapping teams; Operation Coal would funnel cash to Rep. Shirley Chisholm, a black congresswoman from Brooklyn seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, in an effort to sow racial and gender discord in the party; Operation Opal would use electronic surveillance against various targets, including the headquarters of Democratic presidential candidates Edmund Muskie and George McGovern; Operation Sapphire would station prostitutes on a yacht, wired for sound, off Miami Beach during the Democratic National Convention. Mitchell rejected the plans and told Liddy to burn the charts. At a second meeting, less than three weeks later, Liddy presented a scaled-back,

$500,000 version of the plan; Mitchell turned it down again. But soon after, Mitchell approved a $250,000 version, according to Jeb Magruder, the deputy campaign manager. It included intelligence-gathering on the Democrats through wiretaps and burglaries. (Under oath, Mitchell later denied approving the plan.) Tapes also reveal Nixon’s obsession with another Democrat: Sen. Edward Kennedy. “We just might get lucky and … ruin him for ’76,” Nixon said, referring to a presidential election year. “That’s going to be fun.”

The war on justice The arrest of the Watergate burglars set in motion Nixon’s fourth war, against the American system of justice. It was a war of lies and hush money, a conspiracy that became necessary to conceal the roles of top officials and to hide the president’s campaign of illegal espionage and political sabotage, including the covert operations that Mitchell described as “the White House horrors” during the Watergate hearings: the Huston Plan, the Plumbers, the Ellsberg break-in, Liddy’s Gemstone plan and the proposed break-in at Brookings. In a June 23, 1972, tape recording, six days after the arrests at the Watergate, Haldeman warned Nixon that “on the investigation, you know, the Democratic break-in thing, we’re back in the problem area, because the FBI is not under control. … Their investigation is now leading into some productive areas, because they’ve been able to trace the money.” Haldeman said Mitchell had come up with a plan for the CIA to claim that national security secrets would be compromised if the FBI did not halt its Watergate investigation. Nixon approved the scheme and ordered Haldeman to call in CIA Director Richard Helms and his deputy, Vernon Walters. “Play it tough,” the president directed. “That’s the way they play it, and that’s the way we are going to play it.” The contents of the tape were made public Aug. 5, 1974. Four days later, Nixon resigned. Another tape captured discussions in the Oval Office on Aug. 1, 1972, six weeks after the burglars’ arrest, and the day on which The Washington Post published our first story showing that Nixon campaign funds had gone into the bank account of one of the burglars. Nixon and Haldeman discussed paying off the burglars and their leaders to keep them from talking to federal investigators. “They have to be paid,” Nixon said. “That’s all there is to that.” On March 21, 1973, in one of the most memorable Watergate exchanges caught on tape, Nixon met with his counsel, John Dean, who since the break-in had been given the task of coordinating the coverup. “We’re being blackmailed” by Hunt and the burglars, Dean reported, and more people “are going to start perjuring themselves.” “How much money do you need?” Nixon asked. “I would say these people are going to cost a million dollars over the next two years,” Dean replied. “And you could get it in cash,” Nixon said. “I know where it could be gotten. I mean, it’s not easy, but it could be done.” Hunt was demanding $120,000 immediately. They discussed executive clemency for him and the burglars. Haldeman then entered the room, and Nixon led the search for ways “to take care of the jackasses who are in jail.” They discussed a secret $350,000 stash of cash kept in the White House, the possibility of using priests to help hide payments to the burglars, “washing” the money though

Nixon’s final war, waged to this day by some former aides and historical revisionists, aims to play down the significance of Watergate and present it as a blip on the president’s record. “How did a politician as tough and canny as Richard Nixon allow himself to be brought down by a ‘third rate burglary?’ ” Frank Gannon, a former Nixon White House aide, wrote in a Wall Street Journal review of “Watergate,” a 2012 novel that, though fiction, involves many of the real players. Nixon lived for 20 years after his resignation and worked tirelessly to minimize the scandal. Though he had accepted a full pardon from President Gerald Ford, Nixon insisted he had not participated in any crimes. In his 1977 television interviews with British journalist David Frost, he said he had “let the American people down” but that he had not obstructed justice. “I didn’t think of it as a cover-up. I didn’t intend a cover-up. Let me say, if I intended the cover-up, believe me, I would have done it.” Nixon’s secret tapes — and what they reveal — will probably be his most lasting legacy. On them, he is heard talking almost endlessly about what would be good for him, his place in history and, above all, his grudges, animosities and schemes for revenge. On the day he left, Aug. 9, 1974, Nixon gave an emotional farewell speech in the East Room to his staff, his friends and his Cabinet. Near the end of his remarks, he waved his arm, as if to highlight the most important thing he had to say. “Always remember, others may hate you, but those who hate you don’t win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself.” His hatred had brought about his downfall. Nixon apparently grasped this insight, but it was too late. He had already destroyed himself.

Scientists crack mystery of prehistoric giant bugs By Beth Marie Mole San Jose Mercury News

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Irked by irritating insects? Be glad you didn’t live in the late Carboniferous period. Three hundred million years ago, jumbo bugs zipped along with 2-foot-wide wingspans — nearly the size of a crow’s. Now, scientists think they know the secrets to their super size: sky-high oxygen levels and no hungry birds. The enormous insect Meganeura or griffinfly reigned in the late Paleozoic era — about 70 million years before dinosaurs tromped around. Now extinct, their fossils reveal a bug resembling current-day dragonflies. “They’re related to dragonflies; they’re sort of like their uncles,” said paleobiologist Matthew Clapham of the University of California, Santa Cruz. The mega bugs, whose fossils have been found in France and Kansas, were thought to swoop over lush swamps and inland seas, chomping on smaller critters while dodging the era’s tall palm-like trees and ferns.

High oxygen levels Clapham’s research team at the UC Santa Cruz has been trying to solve the mystery of how they managed to grow so monstrous — though oxygen levels have long been suspect. The study was published last week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Insects don’t breathe with lungs, but rather a series of oxygen-absorbing pipes that traverse their bodies. Thus, with higher oxygen levels in the air, the easier it is for insects to breathe. Moreover, with better oxygen supplies, scientists hypothesize that they could sustain bigger bodies. “When you grow insects in a box with lots of oxygen, they get bigger,” Calpham said.

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In the late Carboniferous period, when griffinflies hit their peak size, scientists calculate that the atmospheric oxygen levels also peaked to 30 percent to 35 percent compared to today’s 21 percent. To test whether there’s a relationship or just a coincidence, the team assembled more than 10,000 fossil records of flying insects through the past 300 million years.

Wingspan a key measurement Fossils of bug bodies are hard to come by, Clapham explains. They’re either eaten by predators or decomposed by microbes, but wings keep well. So, the team used wingspan as a proxy for body size. When they compared wingspan records to the oxygen levels, they found a clear correlation. Between 300 and 150 million years ago, when oxygen went up so did maximum insect wingspan. With drops in oxygen levels, insect wings got shorter. That is, until birds evolved. About 150 million years ago, birds like the famous Archaeopteryx entered the scene. The hawk-size early birds looked much like dinosaurs with feathers and long tails, Clapham said, and they hunted the enormous flies and other insects. With new predators, quick maneuverability would be useful to thwart attacks. The fossil records indicate the wingspan dropped to a more agile size, half the length of the Carboniferous period’s griffinflies, despite rises in the oxygen levels. It’s a possible theory, said animal flight scientist Robert Dudley from UC Berkeley. “They haven’t proven that it’s body size, per say,” Dudley said. There’s a strong correlation between wing length and body size, but it’s not perfect, Dudley said.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Year-end school pranks can veer into criminality High School in April. A flurry of messages went Student pranks may be out on Twitter around noon memorable for some teens April 5 describing an appar— especially those who have ent riot at the River Oaksto relive the experience in a area campus. Houston Indecourtroom during their sum- pendent School District ofmer vacations. ficials believe the purported Across Texas, vandal- disturbance was an attempt ism and senior pranks made to get classes cancelled for headlines as high school stu- the day, which administradents finished the school year. tors declined to do. In the Some of those students face end, three students pegged criminal charges brought by as instigators were charged their school districts or by law with Class C misdemeanors. enforcement agenHISD’s Twitter cies that believe account offered the pranks went “You will find a rebuttal, calltoo far. ing the so-called seniors that Kenneth Trump, riot a “misguided feel they a national school prank.” safety expert don’t have Schools across based in Ohio, much to lose, the area saw an said kids who pull uptick in crimibut in reality pranks often don’t nal cases as the know about po- they do.” end of the year tential legal conapproached. sequences until it’s — Kenneth Trump, At the Crosby a school safety too late. Independent expert “Sometimes School District there is a fine line in April, several between a student students were prank and a crime,” Trump charged after slashing tires said. “You will find seniors on 58 buses in what administhat feel they don’t have trators called a senior prank. much to lose, but in reality Five students were arrested they do. They will lose the and charged with felonies. graduation ceremony they School was shut down that worked so hard to achieve morning and some younger and they could lose a clean students were left without record.” rides to school. In Conroe, officials are still “We want the kids to have looking for whoever painted fun and remember their high the high school’s bronze tiger school days, but they need to mascot a bright blue on May 15. stop before crossing the line The 2-ton statue was restored and causing real issues,” Crosto its original bronze by that af- by ISD Superintendent Keith ternoon, but those caught will Moore said. “They need to try face criminal charges. to do things that are rememHigh school students bered but not destructive.” Some school districts have should know better, said Conroe ISD spokeswoman banned students from their own graduations because Lisa Meeks. “We definitely take it seri- of malicious pranks. Keller ously,” Meeks said. “There is Independent School District a difference between a prank in North Texas banned a and vandalism. Wasting tax- dozen students from graduating after they engaged in a payer dollars is not funny.” Nor is disrupting the food fight and released rats, school day, as some Houston crickets, birds and snakes in students learned at Lamar a school building. By Erin Mulvaney

Houston Chronicle

Dayna Smith / The Washington Post

Former CIA officer Henry Crumpton, who runs a consulting business, wrote “The Art of Intelligence,” which was published in May. While the CIA tries to ensure that classified information is not included in the memoirs of former employees, it doesn’t seem to mind allowing former officers to slam one another in print.

Spy memoirs settle old scores • Ex-agents claim credit for operations, slam former colleagues and criticize the CIA itself By Ian Shapira The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — In between his defense of secret prisons, coercive interrogations of al-Qaida suspects and the shredding of highly sensitive videotapes, former CIA spymaster Jose A. Rodriguez Jr. makes room in his memoir “Hard Measures” to talk about the competition: other CIA memoirists. These days, there are just so many of them — and so much controversy surrounding them. One measure of the fallout: The CIA is conducting an internal investigation to determine whether some spy memoirs are being censored merely to scrub out embarrassing details about the agency, rather than to protect against the release of classified information. But the CIA doesn’t seem to mind letting former officers praise or slam one another. In “Hard Measures,” Rodriguez, 63, a Northern Virginian who retired from the agency five years ago, plugs another hot new CIA memoir, “The Art of Intelligence,” published in May by former agency officer Henry A. Crumpton. But Rodriguez also settled some spy scores. Without deigning to utter his rivals’ names or book titles, Rodriguez pilloried “The Interrogator,” a 2011 memoir by ex-CIA operative Glenn L. Carle, and “The Reluctant Spy,” written in 2009 by former agency man John Kiriakou. Rodriguez believes his fellow ex-spies unfairly tainted harsh interrogation tactics — such as waterboarding — that he championed. “Great pretenders,” the memoirist labels his opposing memoirists. The proliferation of CIA memoirs has been fueled by the public’s appetite for insider accounts into the country’s war on terrorism — real-life versions of popular shows such as “Homeland.” The books often command six-figure advances, generate headlines and propel their authors onto network television shows. “There’s never been more interest in the work of the CIA from publishing houses as there has been in the last

decade,” said Bill Harlow, the former CIA spokesman from 1997 to 2004, who co-wrote Rodriguez’s memoir as well as former CIA director George Tenet’s opus, “At the Center of the Storm,” in 2007. While not exactly written in the mold of John Le Carré, the memoirs unspool secrets not easily obtainable under the Freedom of Information Act. Tales about recruiting informants or office gamesmanship often find their way past the agency’s Publications Review Board, which reviews ex-employees’ books and redacts classified details. “In many cases, they are providing the only account there is, and people read the memoirs to flesh out a sparse public record,” said Steven Aftergood, editor of the Federation of American Scientists’ Secrecy News and a CIA memoir enthusiast.

Correcting the record In interviews, many of the spies-turned-authors say they are tired of ceding their stories to journalists or government officials. They want to correct what they contend are mistakes in the public domain about the work they orchestrated. Or they want to expose the agency’s wrongdoings. Either way, after living so long undercover, the ex-spies want a little credit, even if it means dabbling in public self-glorification, something seemingly antithetical to the agency’s ethos. There’s also money to be made, though exactly how much is unclear. CIA stars such as Tenet and Valerie Plame Wilson, the former covert operative whose identity was leaked to the media by White House officials in 2003, reportedly received advances of $2 million. But most advances are far more modest, publishers and authors say. Rodriguez and Harlow sold “Hard Measures” about a week before Osama bin Laden was killed and speculated that they could have gotten a bigger advance had they made their deal afterward. Rodriguez and Crumpton’s books have performed well. Both authors were interviewed on “60 Minutes.” And both

books have made the New York Times bestseller list.

More books in works Ex-CIA officials aren’t turning off the tap anytime soon. Jack Devine, who served for 32 years at the CIA and helped lead the agency’s campaign against the Soviets in Afghanistan, is wrapping up his memoir, to be published early next year by Sarah Crichton Books/ Farrar, Strauss & Giroux. John Rizzo, the CIA’s former acting general counsel who supported the agency’s use of enhanced interrogation techniques, is racing to finish his manuscript for Scribner by the end of the year. And the family of Brian Kelley, a CIA counterintelligence officer who died in 2011 and was once falsely accused of being a Russian spy, is reaching out to literary agents about his unpublished memoir. Devine hopes his CIA memoir — filled with tales about his covert operations, from Chile to Afghanistan — counteracts other books by journalists and former colleagues that have slammed the agency’s covert operations. Now a partner at a New York “corporate intelligence” consulting firm, Devine argues that CIA-led paramilitary missions, not military troops on the ground, are the future of American warfare. For Rizzo, his memoir is a chance to defend himself at length for the first time about his decision to seek Justice Department approval for coercive interrogation techniques against terrorist suspects. Rizzo, now a Steptoe & Johnson lawyer and Hoover Institution visiting fellow, believes his endorsement of those methods cost him a Senate confirmation as the CIA’s permanent general counsel. “As the CIA’s chief lawyer involved in the very creation of the enhanced interrogation techniques program, I’d like to give my personal perspective since I couldn’t during confirmation battles, and why I thought the Justice Department’s memos made sense to me,” said Rizzo, who spent 34 years at the CIA before retiring

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in 2009. “I don’t think we had any other choice, which was critical in preventing the next terrorist attack.” Crumpton is also an agency loyalist, defending his prescience and the CIA’s in the run-up to the Sept. 11 attacks and the Iraq war. Years before the hijackings, he writes that he and others at the CIA were fixated on al-Qaida’s threat to the United States, while the FBI seemed clueless. But Crumpton doesn’t shy away from needling the CIA, which declined to comment for this article. Crumpton writes that he once had to evaluate whether to promote some of the senior-most officers and thought that 10 percent of them didn’t belong at the CIA. “My book is about educating the American people about intelligence,” Crumpton said in an interview, “and setting the historical record straight.”


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012


LOCALNEWS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives passed three appropriations bills this week, providing funding for fiscal year 2013 for the Department of Homeland Security, the legislative branch and various water and energy projects. First, on Wednesday, the House passed the Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, which allocates $32 billion for projects within the departments of Energy and Interior, as well as several independent agencies, including the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, the Northern Border Regional Commission and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The measure passed by a 255-165 margin, with 207 Republicans and 48 Democrats voting yes and 29 Republicans and 136 Democrats voting no.

U.S. HOUSE VOTE • $32 billion to Energy, Interior, other agencies Walden (R) ...................Y Blumenaure (D) ...........N Bonamici (D)................N DeFazio (D)...................N Schrader (D) ................N

See Week / B2

www.bendbulletin.com/local

La Pine will name street for educator

BEND PRIDE FESTIVAL Leia Napoli, left, and Judy Rowe share a laugh while performing with Shapeshifter Modern Fusion Bellydance on Saturday afternoon at the Bend Pride Festival in Riverbend Park.

By Patrick Cliff The Bulletin

Pat Yaeger, a longtime school administrator in La Pine, will have a street renamed in her honor when she retires this summer. Before serving as Rosland Elementary principal the past two years, Yaeger held the same position at La Pine Middle School for 15 years. She also has served as an administrator overseeing schools in southern Deschutes County. Details are being finalized, but the road leading to Rosland — Rease Drive — will likely be renamed Yaeger Way. Beginning on July 1, La Pine Middle School Principal Jim Boen will take over as the south county administrator and said Yaeger has set “a pretty high bar.” “I don’t assume I’ll achieve the same heights as she has. Just keeping my name off the bathroom walls will be enough,” Boen said. Yaeger moved to La Pine after working in Crook County Schools for two years. Her career in education has lasted about four decades. See Educator / B4

B

Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6

Scott Hammers The Bulletin

EMBRACING

EQUALITY By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

W

hen it first began, the Bend Pride Festival was little more than a potluck in the park, recalled Melissa Adams Gianoplus, executive director of the Human Dignity Coalition. Saturday, the eighth annual staging of the festival brought

SUMMIT HIGH SCHOOL

hundreds out to Riverbend Park for a day of celebration, live music and more. Organized by the Human Dignity Coalition, Central Oregon’s oldest group promoting equality for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered people, this year’s festival was the final stop in a week of events marking Pride Month. Stars & Rain-

bows, a social group for gay Central Oregonians, organized happy hours, pizza parties and bowling nights leading up to Saturday’s festival. Adams Gianoplus said the Pride Festival is a good time for gay people in Central Oregon and around the country to celebrate recent victories. See Pride / B4

GILCHRIST HIGH SCHOOL

Sisters fire district taps new chief By Erik Hidle The Bulletin

The Sisters-Camp Sherman Rural Fire Protection District has named Roger Johnson its newest fire chief. Johnson, 46, of Sutherlin, is Johnson a 31-year fire service veteran. He has worked at Douglas County Fire District No. 2 for 28 years. He holds an associate’s degree in fire science and a bachelor’s degree in fire service administration. He is also a licensed paramedic. He will leave the position of battalion chief in Douglas County to take the top job in Sisters. Johnson, who was born in Oregon, says the move will suit him. “Me and my family, we all enjoy the wilderness,” he said. “Our family has done a lot of camping vacations. We like the Steens (Mountain), we like the high Cascades, and we’ve done some hiking on the Pacific Crest Trail.” See Chief / B4

TRINITY LUTHERAN HIGH

STATE NEWS • Portland Newport • • Lebanon

• Talent

• Newport: Invasive species aboard tsunami debris, B3 • Talent: Swimmer aims to compete at London Paralympic Games, B3 • Lebanon: Vietnam War casualty finally laid to rest, B4 • Portland: Thousands attend the annual Rose Festival, B6

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Summit High School graduates turn their tassels during the commencement ceremony Saturday at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds in Redmond.

Joe Kline / The Bulletin

Gilchrist High School graduate Renee Getchell gets a kiss from her mom, Sarah Gutierrez, during the commencement ceremony Saturday at the school.

From right, Andrea Anaya, Calah Clift, Alissa Stichler and Taylor Stichler at Trinity Lutheran’s commencement Saturday at Trinity Lutheran Church in Bend.

CULVER HIGH SCHOOL

MADRAS HIGH SCHOOL

BEND HIGH SCHOOL

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Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Culver High School graduates listen to a speaker during the commencement ceremony at the school on Saturday.

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• Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@ bendbulletin.com and we’ll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution and cannot be altered.

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Bend High School graduates applaud their teachers during the commencement ceremony Saturday at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds in Redmond.

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Members of the Madras High School graduating class make their way to the commencement ceremony Saturday on the school’s athletic field.

YESTERDAY

Pearl Harbor veteran from Redmond finally awarded Purple Heart in 1987 This feature is compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 16, 1912

Old hen with wooden leg now a back number Many of us who have sowed wild oats, and some of us who don’t even know what the phrase means, have heard the little ditty to the effect that once, “There was an old hen and she had a wooden leg. The

best old hen that ever laid an egg.” etc., etc. Well, possibly some have actually seen a peg legged hen. But now it’s possible to view an even stranger sight, for over on the Tumalo an enterprising mother hen has brought into this vale of sorrow and ultimate chicken soup, a chicken that has four legs and two tails. Yes sir, four legs — four sturdy, perfect chicken limbs and two elegant tails! The owner of the freak chanticleer jr. is Charles Wiley of Tumalo. The four legged chicken is a white Wyandotte and was hatched on May 21. It may have been the big

rains that did it, or perhaps its mother ate some grow quick hair restorer by mistake, or the freak may be simply due to the natural productivity of the climate. But whatever the cause, the fact remains that Tumalo boasts the only chicken in Oregon that will be able to provide four drumsticks.

Allen states his position To the Editor of The Bulletin: Since May 28 I have heard considerable criticism, by some of the citizens of the town, on the condition alleged as having existed in the so-called saloon district. See Yesterday / B2


B2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Well shot! READER PHOTOS Email your color or black and white photos to readerphotos@bendbulletin.com.

Week Continued from B1 Thursday, the House approved $39.1 billion for the Department of Homeland Security. The House amended the bill to specify that none of the funds could be used to provide a “public advocate” for illegal immigrants, but an amendment that would have taken away the uniforms of airport screeners working for the Transportation Security Administration failed. The final bill passed 234-182, with 17 Democrats joining 217 Republicans in the majority, while 16 Republicans and 166 Democrats voted against it.

U.S. HOUSE VOTE • $39.1 billion to Department of Homeland Security Walden (R) ................................. Y Blumenaure (D) ......................... N Bonamici (D).............................. N DeFazio (D)................................. N Schrader (D) .............................. N

Thursday, the House approved $3.3 billion to fund the legislative branch, including $1.2 billion for operations of the House itself. While the total funds the House and joint House-Senate undertakings, the Senate adds its own funding when it takes up the matter. The bill passed by a 307-102 vote, with 211 Republicans and 96 Democrats voting in favor and 83 Democrats and 19 Republicans voting against.

U.S. HOUSE VOTE • $3.3 billion to legislative branch Walden (R) .................................. Y Blumenaure (D) .......................... N Bonamici (D)............................... Y DeFazio (D).................................. Y Schrader (D) ............................... Y — Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin

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Erika Roy, a student at the University of San Diego, took this photo on a family road trip to Eugene over the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday weekend.

Yesterday Continued from B1 In that connection I desire to make the following statement: Less than a year ago I saw fit to call upon a large majority of the business men and property owners on Wall street. Practically every one that I talked to at that time expressed himself in favor of a liberal policy in the conduct of the saloon district and most of them were in favor of a “fairly open town” as they expressed it. After having this sentiment expressed by the business interests (other than the saloon interests), I was in favor, as a member of the council, of a more liberal policy, than I otherwise would have been. The public sentiment has very evidently changed and some of the persons that expressed the “fairly open town” ideas are now loud in their “tightly closed” sentiments. After hearing some of this sentiment I, as acting mayor, called a meeting of the city council and have instructed the chief and police to strictly enforce all ordinances of this city immediately, I will not quote same. For the balance of my term on the City Council I intend to use my best efforts to give the citizens of this town the kind of government they have recently asked for verbally and by means of the petition which has been so widely circulated. — H.E. Allen President of the Common Council

also operates a store at Shevlin, Central Oregon’s moveable city, where Alfred Hanson is manager. P.A. Erickson came to Bend 21 years ago, from Sandpoint, Idaho, attracted here by reports of big milling operations and prospects for the rapid development of the interior country, opened to the outside world in 1911 when rival railroads reached Bend. Bend was still little more than a village when the elder Erickson came here, but when the 1920 census was taken figures revealed that the upper Deschutes village had suddenly grown into a city, Up until comparatively recent years, the elder Erickson managed his Bend firm alone, while his sons were attending school and studying at Oregon State college. Shortly after the sons entered business with the father, the modern Erickson food market was erected, on the site of the pioneer structure. Aside from his work as manager of the Erickson store, Carl E. Erickson finds time to serve his community. He is a member of the Bend city commission, serving with Fred F. Simpson, mayor and W.E. Irvine.

Era of fewer teeth seen Men of the future will have only 12 teeth, Dr. Sweet of California predicted in an address at the Dental association’s annual meeting. Dr. Sweet said the “future man” will have a huge head, but a very small chin, with only six teeth in each jaw.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 16, 1937

Firm expands as Bend grows Boys and girls born in Bend the year the original Erickson store was opened here will be eligible to vote this year. The Erickson firm this week is observing the 21st anniversary of its organization in the spring of 1916 by P.A. Erickson, still active in a business that has now expanded into three stores and a meat market. In downtown Bend, the Erickson grocery and the Kwality Kash store are housed in the modern Erickson food market, occupying a spacious building erected only a few years ago. In this up to date food market is also the Erickson meat market, managed by H.M. Hammer. The senior member of the early day firm, founded in that distant year when Bend suddenly cast aside its rangeland atmosphere and emerged into a lumbering center and capital of a vast irrigated area, is now manager of the Columbia grocery in west side Bend. His sons manage the abundantly stocked stores in the downtown market. Carl E. Erickson is manager of the Erickson store in the downtown market and Arthur Erickson is manager of the Kwality Kash store. Ruel O’Leary is manager of the vegetable market, which serves both units of the Erickson market. In addition to the Bend stores the Erickson firm

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 16, 1962

Lava Butte proposed for simulated lunar landing By Phil F. Brogan The Lava Butte area has been suggested as an ideal place for a simulated moon landing. Information that the rugged terrain in the Lava Butte area has been proposed for a simulated landing of a spacecraft on the moon is no news to the Bend Chamber of Commerce: That organization has already set up a special group known as the Lunar Base Research Facility, Inc. A retired Army lieutenantcolonel, William Chenowith, West Point graduate is assisting the chamber group, without pay. Chenowith was raised in Bend and attended Bend High School. Tom Mathews of the Oregon State Department of Geology and Minerals Industries spoke of “Opportunities in Space.” He mentioned the billions being spent in the probe of space. He noted that North American Aviation recently published a handbook, “The Geology of the Lunar Base”, with an appendix covering prospective lunar base sites on the earth. The handbook noted: Two simulated lunar landings and base construction phases are recommended: The first with a highway, railroad, power and water facilities; the second under extremely rug-

ged conditions, with no access routes or power facilities. “The first area suggested is near Bend, Oregon. A basaltic flow issuing from Lava Butte is adjacent to the Deschutes River. The flow itself is bounded by U.S. Highway 97 and traversed by the Great Northern Railroad. Adequate power, a subsidiary access road suitable for heavy duty trucks and housing are available for operation of master control station and slave vehicles. “The basaltic flows and cinder cones in the Bend area are ideal for the test traverses and missions.” Also in Central Oregon, the handbook reports, are other volcanic features considered ideal for lunar landing studies. The second simulated landing area suggested for lunar landing studies is in the Galapagos Islands, where no services or facilities are available. The lunar project would call for earth tests in which spacecraft similar to those planned for landing on the moon would first be tried out on earth. The Lava Butte area, if selected, would be for a landing, not for a blastoff. If earth landings are not successful, it is no use trying one on the moon, Mathews said.

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 16, 1987

Redmond veteran awarded medal decades after WWII service George McPheeters came through World War II with two wounds that would serve as lifetime reminders of his time in the Navy. Bombs dropped Dec. 7, 1941, on Pearl Harbor ruptured both eardrums, causing a permanent partial hearing loss. Later when he served in the South Pacific, the Japanese bombed his ship leaving him with shrapnel that has never been removed from his calf. But as far as the Navy was concerned, McPheeters, who served in many major sea battles, wasn’t wounded. And when he was discharged at the end of the war, the Redmond resident was not awarded the Purple Heart, given to those hurt in combat. Later, McPheeters inquired about the medal a few times through the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars. However, the Navy had lost his medical records and there was little McPheeters could do about the medal and disability pension for which he had filed after his discharge. But after he retired he decided to try again to obtain the medal. “I just figured I had it coming,” he said simply. However, he had no luck with officials at the Veterans Administration and that’s when he turned to U.S. Rep. Bob Smith. “He’s the only one I found that went to bat for me,” McPheeters said.

And on May 19, McPheeters, who with his wife had taken a trip to the East Coast to visit family, was finally awarded the medal in a brief ceremony in Smith’s Washington D.C. office. Although McPheeters waited a long time for the honor, the retired farmer and automobile mechanic said he has nothing against the Navy. “I had a good life in there,” he said, noting that if he had it to do over again he would probably had served his entire career in the service. As it was, McPheeters was in some of the heaviest fighting in the Pacific, rising to the rank of boatswain’s mate by the time the war ended. When the war started McPheeters was stationed in Hawaii on the “U.S.S. Medusa.” And on the morning of the attack on Pearl Harbor, McPheeters remembers drinking a cup of coffee on the deck of the ship when the first Japanese war planes roared into the harbor. “I just thought it was the Navy fighters coming,” remembered McPheeters, who was accustomed to watching Sunday morning drills. Pearl Harbor is where McPheeters sustained the first of his war injuries. The noise of the attack ruptured both eardrums, causing him to lose his hearing for several days.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

B3

O N Swimmer from Talent eyes London Paralympics

O B

3 inches of snow falls at Crater Lake Snow fell in the Cascades late Friday and early Saturday, including 3 inches at Crater Lake National Park. The new snow increased the park’s on-ground snow total to 42 inches, which is higher than normal for this time of year. So far, the park has measured 389 inches this winter, well below the average of 520 inches.

By Joe Zavala Ashland Daily Tidings

For all the work that went into preparing his star pupil, John Weinbrecht wasn’t really sure what to expect when the moment of truth arrived. For one, Sara Slawta was under immense pressure. Her dream of qualifying for the 2012 Paralympic Games in London hung in the balance, and she was about to jump into a pool that was roughly twice the length of the one she had spent the previous two months training in. Also, she had yet to prove herself against top-level competition, and now was being asked to do so under the bright lights of the Keating Aquatic Center on the campus of the University of Cincinnati — a long way, both in distance and scale, from Slawta’s training pools at the Ashland YMCA and Southern Oregon University. But Slawta, a 19-year-old Phoenix High alum who lives in Talent, shrugged off the pressure and made the most of her opportunity at the GTAC Disability Open Meet May 19-20, setting personal records and netting the top time by an American woman in three events — the 200-meter freestyle, 100 backstroke and 100 breaststroke — to keep alive her dream of competing in London. “Actually, she far surpassed my expectations,” says Weinbrecht, who has been coaching Special Olympics swimmers on an off for the last 33 years. “I knew that she was an extremely talented swimmer with great capability and a bright future, but there were a lot of people there, a lot of languages and a lot of people swimming very fast.” But not fast enough to keep Slawta from qualifying for the final stepping stone to London — the U.S. Paralympic Swimming Trials, set for June 14-16 at Bismarck State College Aquatic and Wellness Center in Bismark, N.D. Not bad for somebody who as a young girl was afraid of the water. “That was quite a journey,” Weinbrecht said, “to get to the point where now “her mechanics are second to none. When she gets it, she really gets it.” That in itself is part of the challenge for Slawta. Though physically adept, she has what is classified, in Paralympic terms, as an S14 disability, a cognitive hiccup that affects her ability to process information quickly. This can manifest itself in many different ways, including a swimmer’s understanding of the sport’s rules. “(Slawta) knows what to expect now,” Weinbrecht said. “She’s a lot more used to the size, the turns, the venues, and plus we’re really hitting it this month. “There’s no real certainty, but ... yes, I believe that she has a chance to make the team.”

Coho fishing OK’d on 10 rivers, 1 lake Photos courtesy of Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation via The Associated Press

A scientist sterilizes the side of a dock torn loose from a Japanese fishing port by the March 11, 2011, tsunami. The dock washed up on Agate Beach near Newport last week. Scientists don’t know how much the tsunami debris may add to the invasive species problem on the West Coast.

Invasive species ride tsunami debris ashore By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

When a floating dock the size of a boxcar washed up on a sandy beach in Oregon, beachcombers got excited because it was the largest piece of debris from last year’s tsunami in Japan to show up on the West Coast. But scientists worried it represented a whole new way for invasive species of seaweed, crabs and other marine organisms to break the Earth’s natural barriers and further muck up the West Coast’s marine environments. And more invasive species could be hitching rides on tsunami debris expected to arrive in the weeks and months to come. “We know extinctions occur with invasions,” said John Chapman, assistant professor of fisheries and invasive species specialist at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center. “This is like arrows shot into the dark. Some of them could hit a mark.” Though the global economy has accelerated the process in recent decades by the sheer volume of ships, most from Asia, entering West Coast ports, the marine invasion has been going on since 1869, when the transcontinental railroad brought the first shipment of East Coast oysters packed in seaweed and mud to San Francisco, said Andrew Cohen, director of the Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions in Richmond, Calif. Now, hot spots like San Francisco Bay amount to a “global zoo” of invasive species and perhaps 500 plants and animals from foreign shores have established in U.S. marine waters, said James Carlton, professor of marine sciences at Williams College. They come mostly from ship hulls and the water ships take on as ballast, but also get dumped into bays from home aquariums. The costs quickly mount into the untold billions of dollars. Mitten crabs from China eat baby Dungeness crabs that are one of the region’s top commercial fisheries. Spartina, a ropey seaweed from Europe, chokes commercial oyster beds. Shellfish plug the cooling water intakes of power plants. Kelps and tiny shrimp-like creatures change

This Japanese seaweed, known as wakame, was attached to the dock that floated onto Agate Beach last week.

the food web that fish, marine mammals and even humans depend on. A 2004 study in the scientific journal Ecological Economics estimated 400 threatened and endangered species in the U.S. are facing extinction because of pressures from invasive species. It is too early for scientists to know how much Japanese tsunami debris may add to the invasive species already here. “It may only introduce one thing,” said Cohen. “But if that thing turns out to be a big problem, we would rather it not happen. There could be an economic impact, an ecological impact, or even a human health impact.” The dock, torn loose from a fishing port on the northern tip of Japan, was covered with 1.5 tons of seaweed, mussels, barnacles and even a few starfish. Volunteers scraped it all off, buried it above the high water line, and sterilized the top and sides of the dock with torches. But there was no telling whether they might already have released spores or larvae that could establish a foothold in a bay or estuary as it floated along the coast, said Carlton. “That’s the ‘Johnny Clamseed’ approach,” he said, referring to Johnny Appleseed, the pioneer apple tree planter of the early 19th century. “While that is theoretical, we don’t actually know if that kind of thing happens.” One thing they know is that the bigger the debris, the more ACOUSTIC | ELECTR

IC | NEW | PRE-OWN

likely it has something on it. Chapman estimated there were hundreds of millions of individual living organisms on the dock when it washed up on Agate Beach outside Newport. But even a small plastic float that washed up on a beach in Alaska carried a live oyster, said Mandy Lindeberg, research scientist at the NOAA Fisheries Auke Bay Laboratories in Juneau, Alaska. On the dock, about half the plant species already exist on the West Coast, said Gayle Hansen, a research marine taxonomist at Oregon State University, who has spent hours with her eye scrunched up against a microscope examining samples from the dock. Among the exotic seaweeds was one known as wakame, which has become a nuisance around the world, but is not yet found in Oregon, she said. Whether hitchhiking species will survive here depends on randomness, she said. Seaweeds probably would not have survived to reproduce in the crashing surf at Agate Beach. It’s the wrong kind of environment. But if they had floated into Yaquina Bay, very similar to their home waters in Japan, they could grow and reproduce. Lindeberg said, “The only defense for invasive species is early detection. Just like cancer.” While monitoring is relatively cheap, say $30,000 to watch nearby waters for species from the dock, trying to stop an established invasion is expensive. California spent $7 million trying to eradicate a seaweed, she said. She said she hoped there would be funding for monitoring tsunami invasive species. James Morris, a marine ecologist and invasive species specialist at the NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, in Beaufort, N.C., said the idea a natural disaster like the tsunami could introduce a new avenue for invasive species is intriguing. “It goes to show you that when it comes to invasive species, there are some things you can work to regulate and control,” he said. “And there are issues like this that come up that open up a whole different realm of possibilities.” ED

City says officer’s fatal shooting was ‘unjustified and egregious’ The Associated Press PORTLAND — The city of Portland has filed a legal brief contending that a Portland police officer who shot an unarmed man in the back two years ago should not be reinstated. In a brief to the state Employment Relations Board, attorneys Howard Rubin and Jennifer Nelson wrote that rehiring Ronald Frashour would violate public policy because his use of deadly force was “unjustified and egregious.”

Mayor Sam Adams and Police Chief Mike Reese fired Frashour in November 2010, after concluding that Aaron Campbell did not pose an immediate threat of death or physical injury and the officer failed to consider other tactical options. Arbitrator Jane Wilkinson later ordered the city to reinstate Frashour, finding that the city didn’t prove just cause for his termination. She said a reasonable officer could have concluded that Campbell looked like he was reaching for a gun.

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SALEM — Anglers received good news this week as Fish and Wildlife commissioners approved fishing for wild coho on 10 rivers and one lake. Anglers will be allowed to keep one wild coho in the Nehalem, Tillamook, Nestucca, Siletz, Yaquina, Alsea, Siuslaw, Umpqua, Coos and Coquille rivers and on Tenmile lakes. The season on most rivers opens Sept. 15 and will continue through November, or until river-specific catch caps have been met. A complete description of the 2012 coastal salmon seasons can be found on the Fish and Wildlife website.

Hot air balloon lands near I-205 PORTLAND — Oregon State Police say a hot air balloon with 10 people on board landed in a grassy area west of Interstate 205 Saturday morning after windy conditions prevented its operator from landing safely at two other spots. The operator told police the group departed from the town of Aurora, and the conditions prevented them from landing at two sites north of Canby, so he controlled the descent until finding a suitable spot. No one was injured. The balloon was deflated and removed from the area about 30 minutes after landing.

Police say there had been 911 calls that a hot air balloon was flying low over the Willamette River near Oregon City.

Suspect arrested in fatal hit-and-run EUGENE — Oregon State Police have arrested a driver accused of felony hit-and-run in the death of an 18-year-old man who was struck and killed by a vehicle near Lane Community College this week. Jason Manske, 31, who lives just outside Cottage Grove, also faces a charge of criminally negligent homicide. Lt. Gregg Hastings said state police located and seized a blue 2005 Chevrolet Silverado extended cab pickup believed to be the vehicle that hit Bryson Krissie late Wednesday.

Driver arrested after pickup hits house WILSONVILLE — Authorities say two adults and two children escaped injury early Saturday when a Ford pickup crashed into their home south of Portland. Clackamas County sheriff’s deputy Marcus Mendoza says the four were sleeping in their Wilsonville home when the driver crashed into the house and then tried to flee the scene in the vehicle. Deputies found the pickup in a driveway eight houses away. Mendoza says 40-year-old Nicholas Butler was booked into the county jail after resisting arrest and receiving treatment for a laceration he suffered in the struggle with three deputies. — From wire reports

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

OREGON NEWS

Vietnam casualty laid to rest

O British novelist Unsworth won the ’92 Booker Prize By T. Rees Shapiro

FEATURED OBITUARY

The Washington Post

Photos by Mark Ylen / Albany Democrat-Herald

Robin Hobson, of Benton City, Wash., kisses a rose before placing it on her father’s casket during a funeral for Chief Master Sgt. Arden Hassenger on Friday in Lebanon. Hassenger’s remains were recovered in Laos from a crash site of a C-47 military plane that disappeared in 1965.

A

fter nearly 47 years, friends and relatives in Lebanon have been able to bury a Vietnam War airman killed in action on Christmas Eve 1965. Chief Master Sgt. Arden Hassenger was laid to rest with full military honors Friday. Hassenger joined the Air Force and served as a gunner on several missions during the war. He was 29 when he died in a plane crash in Laos. An investigation team recently found the crash site and his remains. Hassenger’s wife, Sherrie, called it “a beautiful day even though it rained.” Now 73, she recalled her husband as “very sweet, very loving, very honest, and everything he ever did was done perfect.” — The Associated Press

Payton Payne, 2, sits on the lap of his great-grandmother, Sherrie Hessenger, at the graveside service of her husband, Chief Master Sgt. Arden Hassenger, in Lebanon on Friday.

Pride Continued from B1 The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently struck down California’s ban on gay marriage as unconstitutional; last year, the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy that barred openly gay service members from the military was abolished. Locally, Adams Gianoplus said she’s seen Central Oregon change a lot in the nine years since she moved here from Portland. “Central Oregon is becoming a much more welcoming community than it used to be, and we’re feeling it with all of our sponsors and our vendors and the support were getting,” she said. “But there’s still work to be done.” Youth issues are near the top of the list for the Human Dignity Coalition, Adams Gianoplus said. Despite greater acceptance, gay teenagers are still more likely than their straight peers to suffer from depression, experience bullying or contemplate suicide, she said. To improve the environment for gay teens, the Human

Educator Continued from B1 Yaeger found out about the renaming during a recent La Pine Chamber of Commerce meeting, when she also learned there would be a Pat Yaeger Day this summer in the city. “It’s absolutely amazing. ...

Chief Continued from B1 Johnson and his wife have two daughters, one of whom is in high school. Johnson has served on a number of public bodies, including a school budget committee and a county planning committee. He expects to be involved in the Sisters area as well. “I am going to focus more on service groups and clubs now,” Johnson said. “I enjoy projects that help kids, help the commu-

Dignity Coalition is ramping up its support for Gay-Straight Alliances at high schools in the smaller communities of Central Oregon. Kodi Borden, a Central Oregon Community College student and a member of her school’s GSA, said groups like hers struggle to reach people beyond gay students and those sympathetic to gay causes. The group organized dinners, movie nights and other social events to try to attract new faces, she said, but mostly tries to maintain a visible presence on campus and in the community. This spring, the GSA held a “Night of Noise” — a raucous march through downtown Bend to remember the victims of hate crimes — Borden said, attracting a lot of interest and positive feedback from residents. “A lot of straight people tend not to come to things like Pride because they don’t feel comfortable,” she said. “GSA tries to make people feel comfortable in diverse situations, with all kinds of people being whoever they are.”

A lifelong Bend resident, Borden said she never experienced harassment or mistreatment on account of her sexuality, and calls Bend “one of the really good places” for openly gay young people. Jett Johnson, a Eugenebased organizer for the Pride Foundation, said smaller towns and rural and semi-rural areas play an important part in the broader campaign for gay rights. While larger cities may have dozens of organizations advocating for gay issues or providing services to gay residents, he said the gay population in smaller communities — and their friends and families — are often underserved. “I think there’s a misconception that rural areas are inherently homophobic,” he said. “Many rural communities are full of good, hard-working, honest people who may not know a gay or lesbian person and just don’t know the issues. When they’re aware of the issues, they’re happy to sign on for equality and human dignity.”

They surprised me with this,” she said. “I was speechless, which is kind of rare, according to people who know me.” La Pine Mayor Ken Mulenex said renaming Rease Drive has wide community support. Yaeger has played a key role in the improvement of schools in southern Deschutes over

the years and deserves to be recognized, Mulenex said. As a principal, Yaeger has helped inspire students “to stay in school and come to school every day.” “I’m proud to know her,” Mulenex said.

nity and those types of things — service groups that focus on community improvement and community involvement.” Outgoing Chief Taylor Robertson, who’s retiring after 45 years as a firefighter, will help Johnson during the transition. After that, said Robertson, “I’m going to stay in Sisters and stay involved in the community. This will be the turning of another page in a book where every chapter has been good.” Robertson, who knows Johnson through family

friends, said Sisters has gained a solid leader. “Roger is a quality guy and a good fit,” Robertson said. “His background is impeccable, and he has a lot of integrity. I think he is perfect for the job.” The district has a few major projects on the horizon, including the replacement of fire vehicles and the development of a four-acre training site.. Johnson’s first day will be June 18.

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

— Reporter: 541-633-2161, pcliff@bendbulletin.com

— Reporter: 541-617-7837, ehidle@bendbulletin.com

Barry Unsworth, a prizewinning British novelist whose works brilliantly illuminated the moral struggles within exotic cultures in ages past, died Tuesday in Umbria, Italy, where he had lived since the 1990s. He was 81. He had lung cancer, according to British news accounts. Unsworth was considered a master of historical fiction and was known for his keen ability to make the tribulations of ancient times relevant to contemporary readers. In 1992, he shared Britain’s prestigious Man Booker Prize for his novel “Sacred Hunger,” about the perilous transatlantic journey of an 18th-century slave ship. The other winner of the literary award that year was Michael Ondaatje for his novel “The English Patient.” In a review of his most recent novel, “The Quality of Mercy,” Washington Post fiction editor Ron Charles wrote this year that Unsworth “entices us back into a past gloriously appointed with archival detail and moral complexity.” Unsworth’s “sentences recall the sharp detail, moral sensitivity and ready wit of Charles Dickens,” Charles wrote. “But his sense of the lumbering, uneven gait of social progress is more sophisticated, more tempered, one might say, by history.” Unsworth wrote 17 novels. His works explored the oil-lusting greed behind

the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire; investigated the blemished war career of British sailor-statesman Lord Horatio Nelson; and traced the life of intrigue of a spy in early 20thcentury Constantinople. In a 2006 review published in The Washington Post, author David Anthony Durham wrote that Unsworth had a “knack for making the past seem authentic in its historical detail while injecting his tales with lessons relevant to our contemporary struggles.” His best-known book, “Sacred Hunger,” followed the turmoil aboard a merchant slave ship crossing the stormblown seas of the Atlantic. The book helped Unsworth gain prominence in the United States in early 1990s and garnered him widespread praise among literary critics. “In this brilliant narrative,” New York Times critic Herbert Mitgang wrote in 1992, “it is impossible not to feel that Unsworth’s characters represent something larger: the eternal clash between good and greed — sometimes within the same person — and the dream of an Arcadian life where people live free and equal in peace.” The novel revolves around a physician, Matthew Paris, aboard the slave ship, who empathizes with the seasick slaves subjected to brutal conditions below deck. In one part, Unsworth unflinchingly describes the odor of burnt flesh wafting in the salty air after the slaves are branded with hot pokers.

After a hurricane beaches the ship on the Florida coast, the surviving whites and blacks live together harmoniously at a wilderness encampment. Years later, the utopian community unravels when the wrecked ship’s owners come looking to reclaim their human property. In a 1992 Post review, novelist Gary Jennings called the book “utterly magnificent,” noting that “by its last page, you will be close to weeping — not just for the wretched slaves and seamen, and for the many others maltreated, and for the brave, doomed colony — but for the whole of what Mark Twain once called ‘the damned human race.’ ” Barry Forster Unsworth was born Aug. 10, 1930, in Wingate in northeast England. He was a 1951 English graduate the University of Manchester. After college, he traveled Europe and the Mediterranean, exploring Greece and Turkey — the settings of several of his novels. During the 1990s, he taught at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop in Iowa City. His first novel, “The Partnership,” about a business relationship that is complicated by one man’s love for the other, was published in Britain in 1966. Unsworth’s popularity rose after the release of his 1973 book, “Mooncranker’s Gift,” about a budding intellectual and his mentor, which won the Heinemann Award for fiction. His marriage to Valerie Moore ended in divorce. Survivors include his wife, Aira Pohjanvaara-Buffa, whom he married in 1992; and three children from his first marriage.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

B5

O D N Betty Roach, of Sisters March 3, 1934 - June 6, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals-Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private service has been held. Contributions may be made to:

American Cancer Society or Oregon Public Broadcasting.

B. Lucille Richardson, of Bend June 5, 1915 - June 2, 2012 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: Were held at 2:00 PM, Friday, June 08, 2012 at Deschutes Memorial Mausoleum Chapel, 63875 N. Hwy. 97, Bend. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.

Clifton G. Hutchins, of Bend Sept. 16, 1930 - May 27, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend (541) 318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, July 14, 2012 at 2:00 P.M. at the Bend Moose Lodge, 61341 S Highway 97, Bend, OR 97702. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Holly Elizabeth Davis, of Bend Sept. 24, 1953 - April 22, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: A celebration of Holly's life will take place at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, June 17, 2012, at a private residence in Portland, OR. All of Holly's friends are welcome. For those who may need more information, please inquire when signing Holly's online guest book at www.autumnfunerals.net.

Jonathan Zane Adams, of Bend Dec. 26, 1923 - June 7, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: A memorial service will be held Sat., June 16, 2012, at 1:00 p.m., in the Hope United Methodist Church, Drain, OR. Contributions may be made to:

Memorial contributions may be made to St. Charles Hospital Rehabilitation Center, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701.

Russell Ward Johnson, of Bend July 8, 1946 - June 4, 2012 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: No Services will be held at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend, OR 97701.

Robert ‘Bob’ L. Bennett, of Prineville July 23, 1927 - June 5, 2012 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, Prineville, OR. 541-447-6459 Services: At his request, there will only be a private family gathering. No public service will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Memorial donations may be made to Pioneer Memorial Hospice at 1201 NE Elm St., Prineville, OR 97754. Please visit www.prinevillefuneralhome.com

to share your memories or express your condolences by signing the on-line guest book.

Ronald Pankratz, of Bend Oct. 18, 1925 - June 5, 2012 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592;

www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com

Services: Were held at 11:00 AM, Saturday, June 9, 2012 at First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend, OR 97701.

Karen Lee Chinn, of La Pine June 9, 1937 - May 31, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held in her honor on Saturday, June 23, 2012, at 2:30 PM at the Hoodland Lutheran Church, 59151 E. Hwy. 26 in Brightwood, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:

pancreatic.org.

Wendel O. Manning, Formerly of Prineville July 4, 1924 - June 3, 2012 Arrangements: English Funeral Chapel, Coeur d'Alene 208-664-3413 www.Englishfuneralchapel.com

An online guestbook is available. Services: A memorial service will be held at the Lake City Center, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, at 12:00 p.m., on Saturday, June 16, 2012. Contributions may be made to:

The family requests donations in lieu of flowers be made to Central Oregon or Kootenai County Idaho Hospice in Wendel's name.

Roberta L. Jackson, of La Pine March 6, 1961 - June 6, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, OR. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Contributions to help pay funeral expenses in Roberta’s memory would be appreciated. Contributions may be sent payable to: Baird Memorial Chapel, P.O. Box 1530, La Pine, OR 97739.

Wendel O. Manning

Agnes ‘Aggie’ Jean Price

Dean A. Jensen

July 4, 1924 - June 3, 2012

Dec. 18, 1928 - June 3, 2012

Wendel O. Manning, 87, of Post Falls, Idaho, passed away on June 3, 2012. He was born on the Fourth of July, 1924. A proud American, at 17 years old, he lied about his age and joined the Army Air Corp at the Wendel O. outbreak Manning of World War II. He saw combat in the North Pacific, flying as a tail gunner in B29 missions over Japan and earned a Purple Heart. He survived multiple B-17 plane crashes including one that killed the rest of his crew and shattered his back, but still he served on. He lived his motto: Duty, Honor, Country and gave a life of service. In 1968, Wendel joined the Oregon National Guard and later entered the Oregon Guard Reserve where he obtained an Officer’s Commission. Eventually his three sons would follow in his military footsteps, Gary and Ron to the Air Force, and Mike to the Army. After the war, Wendel joined Douglas Aircraft and worked on manufacturing DC-5 aircraft, Aerojet General’s “Saturn V� rocket that put men on the moon, and the LEM propulsion system that brought them home on Apollo 13. At Douglas Aircraft he met his beloved wife, Ruth. The family moved from California to Oregon, where Wendel worked in the paper industry. He served as a Leader in the Boy Scouts and would eventually serve Hospice for many years as a volunteer Chaplain in Central Oregon. He was generous to a fault, and gave to many charities. In 1998, he moved to Coeur d’ Alene to live close to his son, Mike, and his family. Wendel was a dedicated soldier, husband, father and friend. He is preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Ruth; and stepdaughter, Shirley. He is survived by three sons, Ron (Marilyn) Manning of Toledo, Oregon; Michael (Stephany) Manning of Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho; and Gary Peyton of Weatherford, Texas; two sisters, Melvina Manning of Stockton, California and Joy Funkhouser of Tracy, California; 18 grandchildren, numerous greatgrandchildren, nieces and nephews. Funeral arrangements have been handled by English Funeral Home in Coeur d’ Alene. A remembrance is scheduled at the Lake City Center in Coeur d’Alene, on June 16, at 12:00 p.m. The family has requested that any last respects be shown in the form of a donation to his favorite charity, Hospice. Please visit Wendel’s online memorial and sign the guest book at www.englishfunerlachapel.com.

Agnes Jean Price ‘Aggie’, 83, passed away peacefully in her sleep Sunday, June 3, 2012, at the Beehive House in Roy, Utah. She was born December 18, 1928, in Chicago, Illinois, to Hugh Deans Morris Sr. and Agnes Price Roselyn Kreter. In the summer of 1929, her family moved to Los Angeles, California, where she grew up and graduated from John Marshall High School in 1947. On December 26, 1946, Agnes married Richard Carrington Price Sr. in Los Angeles, California. Agnes was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and served as Camp Director. She had a love for camping. She was a Girl Scout leader for nine years and enjoyed being around the girls. She loved going on campouts, and canoeing down the Colorado River and camping out on the beach. She loved being with her family and enjoyed taking trips with them. If she wasn’t camping, she would often be on the back of a motorcycle with her husband. She enjoyed their biking trips together, many times accompanied by her sons. Agnes is survived by her children, Richard C. (Marsha) Price Sr., Oregon; Robert (Judy) Price, California; David (Donna) Price, California; Ralph (Barbara) Price, California; Linda Seese, Arizona; Maureen (Bradley) Maples, Utah; Mary Price, California; 26 grandchildren, 28 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild. She was preceded in death by her husband, Richard Carrington Price Sr. A viewing will be held Tuesday, June 12, 2012, from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., at the Arlington Funeral Home, 9645 Magnolia Avenue, Riverside, California. A graveside service will be held following the viewing at 2:00 p.m., at the Riverside National Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family at

Dean Allen Jensen left us too early in life after a short but difficult battle with cancer. Dean was born in Portland, OR, to Clarence and Viola Jensen. three to Clarence and Viola Jensen. They moved to Bend when he was a toddler and lived on OB Riley Road. Dean attended St. Francis Catholic School until he entered Bend Senior High and graduated in 1966. Dean always had a love for muscle cars and Harley’s. His hobbies included shooting guns, riding motorcycles with his friends and building things. In his younger years, his Friday nights were always the highlight of his week. That was when he and his biker buddies would cut loose. As they all aged, that changed to Tuesday evenings at his shop with the same old boys, but they still had fun. He worked for Beaver Coaches for many years and after that he worked for CH Manufacturing. Dean was married twice, first to Linda Wilson for 18 years until 1987, then to Leah Marks for 16 years until his death. He had two children, Jennifer (Jensen) Flood and Justin Jensen, that he would do anything for, and left a long list of friends and loved ones. Dean was always ready to lend a helping hand to anyone. He is also survived by his sister, Carol Moore of Bend, OR, and brother, Don Jensen of Arizona. A memorial service for Dean will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 16, at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. Hwy 97, Bend. A celebration of life with a potluck, will be held after the services at 21521 Powderhorn Dr., Bend, OR 97701. Please bring your favorite dish, memories or humorous stories to the celebration. A map will be available at the service.

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Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

JoDene (Wilson) Scott Jan. 12, 1957 - May 24, 2012 A Celebration of Life will be held from noon until 3 p.m. on Saturday, June 16, at the Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Road, Bend, for JoDene Scott of Bend who died on May 24 of cancer. She was 55. JoDene was born to Larry and JoAnn Wilson on JoDene Scott January 12, 1957, in Twin Falls, Idaho. She attended school in Salem and Redmond, graduating from Redmond in 1975. She married Howard Scott in 1976, and they had two sons, Justin and Cole. She worked at McGrath’s Restaurant for many years, leaving to work in flower gardens, where she spent the last 15 years doing what she loved. Survivors include: her father, Larry Wilson; sons, Justin and Cole; and grandsons, Tyson and Kolton, all of Bend; and two brothers, Kelly Wilson of Bend and Chris Wilson of Redmond. She leaves behind many friends and will be sorely missed.

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E Deaths of note from around the world: Stan Jolley, 86: One of the original designers of Disneyland who later worked on Disney film and TV projects. He shared an Oscar nomination for best art direction and set decoration as production designer for the 1985 film “Witness.� Died Monday in Rancho Mirage, Calif., of gastric cancer. David Helpern, 94: The business side of husband-and-wife apparel design team Joan & David, who popularized elegant, comfortable — and nonhigh-heeled — shoes for working women in the 1960s before expanding to include clothing. Died May 14 in Westwood, Calif., of Alzheimer’s disease. — From wire reports

Carl Thomas Foster August 1, 1912 - June 3, 2012 At just two months short of his 100th birthday, Carl left this life for his eternal home following a very short illness.

Obituary policy

Oct. 21, 1948 – Nov. 2, 2011

Carl was born in Topeka, KS, August 1, 1912, to Bert and Eva Foster. When he was 12 years old, the family moved to Alhambra, CA. He graduated from Pasadena Junior College. He married Geneva Evans in 1937, and they moved to Temple City, CA, where they raised two sons. Carl worked for the telephone company in the Los Angeles area for 40 years, rising to the position of traffic engineer. He stayed in Temple City for a number of years following Geneva’s death in 1992, and then in 2008, moved to Whispering Winds Retirement Home in Bend, OR, for the remainder of his life. Carl leaves behind his son, David and wife, Melinda of Mammoth Lakes, CA; and his son, Don and wife, Dorene of Sunriver, OR; grandson, Steve of Littleton, CO; and step-grandson, Colin Chapman and his wife, Leslie; and great-grandchildren, Alexandra and CJ of Richmond, VA. Carl will be buried in Los Angeles, CA. No service is planned. Autumn Funerals is in charge of the arrangements.

Nora Rosalie Shea Copeland January 12, 1923 – June 5, 2012 Nora R. Copeland died June 5, 2012 in Redmond, OR at the age of 89. Nora was born January 12, 1923 in Portland, OR to James and Bertha May (Willard) Shea. Nora was raised in Gresham, OR where she graduated from Gresham High. She worked as the City Recorder in Gresham until moving to Redmond, OR in 1956. After relocating to Central Oregon Nora and her first husband Jack owned and operated a local variety store in Redmond, The Fair Store. In 1970 Nora decided to become a Realtor and started working for Redmond Realty, in 1972 she partnered up with George Trout and they started Trout Realty Inc, Nora and George were married on July 4, 1975 in Reno, Nevada. She was awarded Realtor of the year in 1988 and in 1995 they retired. Nora was very involved in her community, she was a member and the first President and organizer of Central Oregon District Hospital Auxiliary, she served 2 terms on the Redmond School Board, she was President of Redmond Chamber of Commerce, a member of Soroptimist and Sam Johnson’s Toast Masters. She and George were founding charter members of Central Oregon Multiple Listing Service. Nora also played a big part in the Central Oregon Spud Festival. In her spare time Nora enjoyed trips to Reno spent gambling and watching shows. She also loved reading and was a great card player. Nora is survived by her husband George D. Trout Jr., sons Mike Copeland of LaGrande and Larry Copeland of Portland, 3 stepchildren all of Central Oregon, 9 grandchildren; Richard Copeland of Redmond, Kelley Copeland of Redmond, Pete (Guy) Barker of Sacramento, Joel Barker of Portland, Gabe Trout of Eugene, Sara Trout of Seattle, Tanda Allen of Provo, Jason Trout of Anchorage and Brandi Reinhardt of Anchorage and 7 great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her first husband Jack Copeland, 4 sisters Lola, Mickey, Colleen, and Patricia and 1 stepson. A celebration of life will be held Monday June 11, 2012 at 1:30 PM at Redmond Memorial Chapel. In lieu of flowers donations can be made to Redmond Boys and Girls Club. Please sign our guestbook at www.redmondmemorial.com.


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

B6

W E AT H ER FOR EC A ST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.

TODAY, JUNE 10

MONDAY

Today: Sunny.

Ben Burkel

Bob Shaw

LOW

68

40

60/51

59/51

Cannon Beach 61/51

Hillsboro Portland 71/53 71/49

Tillamook 68/50

Salem

63/46

74/48

74/52

Maupin

Corvallis

65/38

Prineville 72/42 Sisters Redmond Paulina 68/38 68/40 70/41 Sunriver Bend

65/52

Eugene

Florence

71/48

66/48

67/50

70/46

Coos Bay

67/38

Oakridge

Cottage Grove

Crescent

Roseburg

61/48

62/49

Gold Beach

65/38

67/40

John Day

Unity 65/39

67/42

Vale 73/49

71/41

68/39

67/39

Jordan Valley 69/42

Rome

Klamath Falls 72/39

Ashland

65/49

Medford

72/39

80/49

Brookings

• 69°

69/42

Chiloquin

Medford

Yesterday’s state extremes

69/39

Paisley

62/50

62/37

Frenchglen

70/36

Grants Pass 81/46

71/49

Juntura

Burns Riley

69/40

Silver Lake

66/35

Port Orford

EAST Partly cloudy skies today. Clear Ontario to partly cloudy 72/49 tonight.

Baker City

Christmas Valley

Chemult

75/47

61/35

CENTRAL Sunny skies and pleasant today. Clear skies tonight.

Nyssa

Hampton

Fort Rock 69/39

66/36

61/31

Bandon

65/43

Brothers 67/37

La Pine 68/37

Crescent Lake

63/49

68/40

62/39

Union

Mitchell 73/43

71/46

Camp Sherman

72/48

Yachats

Spray 71/43

/

Joseph

Granite

Warm Springs

Enterprise

Meacham 66/43

67/44

Madras

59/38

La Grande

Condon

73/48

Wallowa

62/33

68/45

73/45

72/47

71/47

75/48

Ruggs

Willowdale

Albany

Newport

Pendleton

75/52

69/47

71/50

58/48

Hermiston 76/48

Arlington

Wasco

Sandy

Government Camp 56/42

69/49

75/51

The Biggs Dalles 71/49

71/47

McMinnville

Lincoln City

Umatilla

Hood River

75/55

• 28°

Fields

Lakeview

McDermitt

69/46

68/42

Lakeview

72/36

-30s

-20s

-10s

10s

Vancouver 61/54

Yesterday’s extremes (in the 48 contiguous states):

0s

Calgary 61/43

Boise 68/44

Death Valley, Calif.

San Francisco 71/53

Las Vegas 91/69

Salt Lake City 67/46

Los Angeles 74/61

Denver 79/49 Albuquerque 90/59

Phoenix 101/75

Honolulu 86/72

Tijuana 73/57 Chihuahua 97/70

Anchorage 62/48

La Paz 94/66 Juneau 61/47

50s

60s

70s

80s

90s

100s 110s

Quebec 76/55

Winnipeg 73/51

Bismarck 70/53

Cheyenne 71/41

Truckee, Calif. Pensacola, Fla.

40s

Rapid City 71/51

• 25° • 13.12”

30s

Saskatoon 59/45

Billings 65/46

Partly cloudy.

HIGH LOW

75 49

Mostly sunny.

HIGH LOW

76 45

73 43

BEND ALMANAC

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . .6:26 a.m. . . . . 10:13 p.m. Venus . . . . . .4:57 a.m. . . . . . 7:56 p.m. Mars. . . . . .12:43 p.m. . . . . . 1:29 a.m. Jupiter. . . . . .4:13 a.m. . . . . . 6:58 p.m. Saturn. . . . . .3:33 p.m. . . . . . 2:52 a.m. Uranus . . . . .2:03 a.m. . . . . . 2:27 p.m.

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend 24 hours ending 4 p.m.*. . 0.00” High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55/32 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . 0.07” Record high . . . . . . . . 88 in 1930 Average month to date. . . 0.27” Record low. . . . . . . . . 26 in 1999 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.14” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Average year to date. . . . . 5.29” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.30.14 Record 24 hours . . .0.68 in 2009 *Melted liquid equivalent

Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:22 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:48 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:22 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:49 p.m. Moonrise today . . . 12:31 a.m. Moonset today . . . 12:28 p.m.

Moon phases Last

New

First

June 11 June 19 June 26

OREGON CITIES

Full

July 3

FIRE INDEX

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Precipitation values are 24-hour totals through 4 p.m.

Bend, west of Hwy. 97.....Low Bend, east of Hwy. 97......Low Redmond/Madras ........Low

Astoria . . . . . . MM/MM/NA Baker City . . . . . 56/38/trace Brookings . . . . . .65/47/0.06 Burns. . . . . . . . . .60/34/0.01 Eugene . . . . . . . .67/45/0.01 Klamath Falls . . 60/31/trace Lakeview. . . . . . .59/28/0.00 La Pine . . . . . . . NA/NA/0.00 Medford . . . . . . 69/47/trace Newport . . . . . MM/MM/NA North Bend . . . . .61/48/0.16 Ontario . . . . . . . .66/47/0.00 Pendleton . . . . . 61/44/trace Portland . . . . . . 65/47/trace Prineville . . . . . . NA/NA/0.00 Redmond. . . . . . 60/35/trace Roseburg. . . . . . .67/48/0.01 Salem . . . . . . . MM/MM/NA Sisters . . . . . . . . NA/NA/0.00 The Dalles . . . . . 66/47/trace

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

. . . . .60/51/c . . . . . .64/54/c . . . .67/40/pc . . . . . .76/45/s . . . . .65/49/s . . . . . .70/51/s . . . . .69/35/s . . . . . .76/46/s . . . . .71/48/s . . . . .75/55/pc . . . . .72/39/s . . . . . .79/44/s . . . . .68/42/s . . . . . .75/47/s . . . . .68/37/s . . . . . .76/40/s . . . . .80/49/s . . . . . .87/55/s . . . .58/48/pc . . . . .59/53/pc . . . .65/48/pc . . . . .65/51/pc . . . .72/49/pc . . . . . .81/54/s . . . . .75/48/s . . . . .80/55/pc . . . .71/53/pc . . . . .77/59/pc . . . . .72/42/s . . . . . .77/46/s . . . . .70/42/s . . . . .76/47/pc . . . . .75/47/s . . . . .82/52/pc . . . .71/50/pc . . . . .76/57/pc . . . . .68/40/s . . . . .74/45/pc . . . . .74/52/s . . . . .82/61/pc

PRECIPITATION

WATER REPORT Sisters ...............................Low La Pine...............................Low Prineville..........................Low

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . 49,788 . . . . . . 55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193,114 . . . . . 200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . 80,196 . . . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . 40,142 . . . . . . 47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140,227 . . . . . 153,777 The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . 449 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . 760 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . 182 LOW MEDIUM HIGH V.HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . 1,635 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . 76 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . 226 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . 11.0 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . 328 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 LOW MEDIUM HIGH or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 8

POLLEN COUNT

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

Seattle 67/52 Portland 71/53

• 107°

20s

THURSDAY

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s

HIGH LOW

75 48

WEST Partly to mostly cloudy skies today and tonight.

Astoria

WEDNESDAY Partly cloudy.

HIGH LOW

FORECAST: STATE Seaside

Mostly sunny.

Tonight: Partly cloudy.

HIGH

TUESDAY

Thunder Bay 78/53

St. Paul 91/64

Green Bay 88/70 Detroit 87/69

Halifax 66/48 Portland 77/53 Boston 77/60 New York 84/65

To ronto 85/64 Buffalo

83/67 Philadelphia 90/68 Columbus 90/68 Washington, D. C. 92/72 Louisville 84/70 Charlotte 83/66

Des Moines Chicago 92/64 93/77 Omaha 86/60 St. Louis 87/72 Kansas City 92/67 Nashville Oklahoma City 80/68 91/71 Little Rock 86/72 Atlanta 77/68 Birmingham Dallas 80/71 96/77 New Orleans 85/76 Houston 95/77

Orlando 92/73 Miami 90/77

Monterrey 104/75 Mazatlan 86/73

FRONTS

PORTLAND ROSE FESTIVAL FUN FLOATS Sophia Fish and Connor Regan, both of Lake Oswego, dance with the 1950sthemed float for Reser’s Fine Foods during the Grand Floral Parade in Portland on Saturday. Katie Currid The Associated Press

NO RAIN ON THIS PARADE Children attend the Grand Floral Parade on Saturday. Thousands lined Portland streets to watch the 100th running of the parade, which is the crown jewel of the Portland Rose Festival. Despite rain in the forecast, spectators were treated to calm — even sunny — skies. Katie Currid / The Associated Press

RACING — WITH A ROAR A dragon boat team nears the finish line on the Willamette River during the Portland Rose Festival Dragon Boat Race on Saturday in Portland. About 75 teams competed in the 24th annual races. Teams generally have 16 paddlers, a caller, a tiller and a flag catcher. Races in three divisions (high school, women-only and mixed) continue today, starting at 8 a.m.

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . . .93/66/0.00 100/74/pc 101/71/pc Akron . . . . . . . . . .88/59/0.00 . . . 90/60/s . . .85/68/t Albany. . . . . . . . . .74/53/0.01 . .85/65/pc . 86/57/pc Albuquerque. . . . .95/64/0.00 . . . 90/59/s . . 89/63/s Anchorage . . . . . .60/50/0.00 . . .62/48/c . 57/47/sh Atlanta . . . . . . . . .86/66/0.00 . . . 77/68/t . . .82/68/t Atlantic City . . . . .88/62/0.00 . . . 76/66/s . . 79/66/s Austin . . . . . . . . . .94/64/0.00 . .98/75/pc . 98/76/pc Baltimore . . . . . . .90/62/0.00 . . . 92/66/s . 89/67/pc Billings . . . . . . . . .65/49/0.18 . .65/46/sh . 72/49/sh Birmingham . . . . .80/67/0.03 . . . 80/71/t . . .82/71/t Bismarck. . . . . . . .87/63/0.00 . . . 70/53/t . 68/49/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . . .63/43/0.13 . .68/44/pc . . 77/49/s Boston. . . . . . . . . .79/59/0.00 . . . 77/60/s . . 76/58/s Bridgeport, CT. . . .76/64/0.00 . .78/61/pc . . 76/62/s Buffalo . . . . . . . . .72/61/0.12 . .83/67/pc . . 89/68/s Burlington, VT. . . .78/48/0.00 . . . 82/58/s . . 87/60/s Caribou, ME . . . . .66/53/0.05 . .70/52/pc . 79/55/pc Charleston, SC . . .84/62/0.00 . . . 85/70/t . . .87/70/t Charlotte. . . . . . . .87/55/0.00 . .83/66/pc . . .84/69/t Chattanooga. . . . .86/64/0.00 . . . 78/67/t . . .81/68/t Cheyenne . . . . . . .87/52/0.00 . . . 71/41/s . . 72/46/s Chicago. . . . . . . . .90/65/0.00 . .93/77/pc . . .88/69/t Cincinnati . . . . . . .86/54/0.00 . .90/68/pc . . .81/66/t Cleveland . . . . . . .88/62/0.00 . . . 85/64/s . . .82/69/t Colorado Springs .92/58/0.00 . . . 74/45/s . 71/47/pc Columbia, MO . . .91/61/0.00 . .90/70/pc . . .88/63/t Columbia, SC . . . .89/62/0.00 . . . 83/69/t . . .88/69/t Columbus, GA. . . .85/67/0.00 . . . 83/71/t . . .83/69/t Columbus, OH. . . .88/58/0.00 . .90/68/pc . . .83/68/t Concord, NH. . . . .79/47/0.00 . . . 83/53/s . 82/54/pc Corpus Christi. . . .94/75/0.01 . .95/78/pc . 95/78/pc Dallas Ft Worth. . .91/69/0.00 . .96/77/pc . 99/76/pc Dayton . . . . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . .90/67/pc . . .80/66/t Denver. . . . . . . . . .95/61/0.00 . . . 79/49/s . 80/51/pc Des Moines. . . . . .91/63/0.00 . .92/64/pc . 83/61/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . . .90/62/0.00 . .87/69/pc . . .80/68/t Duluth. . . . . . . . . .88/62/0.00 . . . 84/57/t . 73/51/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . .101/69/0.00 . .100/72/s . 98/72/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . . .65/55/0.00 . . .75/57/c . 78/49/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . . .96/64/0.00 . . . 78/55/t . 71/49/sh Flagstaff . . . . . . . .78/50/0.00 . . . 75/38/s . . 78/40/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . . .87/64/0.00 . .91/68/pc . . .85/67/t Green Bay. . . . . . .92/71/0.00 . .88/70/pc . . .82/62/t Greensboro. . . . . .86/59/0.00 . .87/65/pc . . .83/66/t Harrisburg. . . . . . .89/59/0.00 . . . 87/66/s . 86/67/pc Hartford, CT . . . . .77/60/0.00 . .84/58/pc . 82/58/pc Helena. . . . . . . . . .60/41/0.00 . .58/44/sh . 74/46/pc Honolulu. . . . . . . .85/74/0.00 . . . 86/72/s . . 86/72/s Houston . . . . . . . .92/71/0.00 . .95/77/pc . 95/77/pc Huntsville . . . . . . .87/66/0.00 . . . 79/68/t . . .84/69/t Indianapolis . . . . .86/60/0.00 . .90/68/pc . . .80/69/t Jackson, MS . . . . .81/71/0.31 . . . 84/72/t . . .91/72/t Jacksonville. . . . . .80/69/0.53 . . . 87/71/t . . .89/71/t Juneau. . . . . . . . . .58/45/0.01 . . . 61/47/r . . .56/45/r Kansas City. . . . . .91/61/0.00 . .92/67/pc . 84/63/pc Lansing . . . . . . . . .87/62/0.00 . .91/68/pc . . .85/68/t Las Vegas . . . . . . .98/76/0.00 . . . 91/69/s . . 97/73/s Lexington . . . . . . .87/56/0.00 . . . 80/68/t . . .82/68/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . . .92/59/0.00 . . . 85/59/t . . 85/61/s Little Rock. . . . . . .89/67/0.00 . . . 86/72/t . 92/73/pc Los Angeles. . . . . .69/61/0.00 . .74/61/pc . 73/62/pc Louisville. . . . . . . .88/62/0.00 . . . 84/70/t . . .80/69/t Madison, WI . . . . .88/69/0.00 . .90/70/pc . . .83/62/t Memphis. . . . . . . .88/73/0.00 . . . 83/72/t . . .88/72/t Miami . . . . . . . . . .89/77/0.00 . .90/77/pc . 89/77/pc Milwaukee . . . . . .90/67/0.00 . .88/68/pc . . .83/64/t Minneapolis . . . . .92/72/0.00 . . . 91/64/t . 80/55/pc Nashville. . . . . . . .88/61/0.00 . . . 80/68/t . . .82/70/t New Orleans. . . . .85/74/0.18 . . . 85/76/t . . .90/76/t New York . . . . . . .78/68/0.00 . . . 84/65/t . 81/62/pc Newark, NJ . . . . . .82/64/0.00 . . . 86/65/t . 82/62/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . . .88/63/0.00 . . . 89/68/s . 88/68/pc Oklahoma City . . .88/62/0.00 . .91/71/pc . . .90/69/t Omaha . . . . . . . . .92/64/0.00 . . . 86/60/t . . 84/62/s Orlando. . . . . . . . .88/73/0.31 . . . 92/73/t . . .92/73/t Palm Springs. . . . .98/71/0.00 . .101/68/s . 104/71/s Peoria . . . . . . . . . .88/61/0.00 . .90/71/pc . . .86/67/t Philadelphia . . . . .89/63/0.00 . . . 90/68/s . 85/68/pc Phoenix. . . . . . . .103/75/0.00 . .101/75/s . 103/77/s Pittsburgh . . . . . . .85/59/0.00 . . . 87/64/s . 87/66/pc Portland, ME. . . . .77/51/0.00 . . . 77/53/s . . 75/54/s Providence . . . . . .76/59/0.02 . . . 81/58/s . . 78/57/s Raleigh . . . . . . . . .89/57/0.00 . .90/66/pc . . .85/66/t

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . . .83/59/0.00 . .71/51/pc . 72/52/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . . .67/48/0.00 . . . 77/48/s . . 86/56/s Richmond . . . . . . .90/61/0.00 . . . 91/67/s . 89/68/pc Rochester, NY . . . .75/61/0.37 . .86/66/pc . . 89/68/s Sacramento. . . . . .82/50/0.00 . . . 94/59/s . . 98/62/s St. Louis. . . . . . . . .91/63/0.00 . .87/72/pc . . .89/69/t Salt Lake City . . . .71/56/0.00 . . . 67/46/s . . 76/52/s San Antonio . . . . .93/66/0.00 . .99/77/pc . 98/77/pc San Diego . . . . . . .65/60/0.00 . .67/60/pc . 68/61/pc San Francisco . . . .70/50/0.00 . . . 76/54/s . . 74/53/s San Jose . . . . . . . .79/49/0.00 . . . 86/64/s . . 89/55/s Santa Fe . . . . . . . .91/51/0.00 . . . 82/51/s . . 82/56/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . . .85/62/0.00 . . . 86/72/t . . .88/70/t Seattle. . . . . . . . . 63/47/trace . .67/52/pc . 70/56/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . . .89/68/0.00 . .80/54/pc . . 77/55/s Spokane . . . . . . . .51/40/0.16 . .66/46/pc . 72/52/pc Springfield, MO . .88/59/0.00 . .87/69/pc . . .85/65/t Tampa. . . . . . . . . .88/73/0.00 . . . 92/78/t . . .93/76/t Tucson. . . . . . . . .102/68/0.00 . . . 99/68/s . 100/69/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . . .91/63/0.00 . .93/73/pc . . .89/68/t Washington, DC . .91/67/0.00 . . . 92/72/s . 89/71/pc Wichita . . . . . . . . .91/60/0.00 . .91/70/pc . . .86/65/t Yakima . . . . . . . . .64/39/0.00 . . . 75/48/s . 79/55/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . . .103/73/0.00 . .102/71/s . 105/73/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . . .59/52/0.00 . .62/51/sh . 63/51/sh Athens. . . . . . . . . .86/60/0.00 . . . 91/69/s . . 86/69/s Auckland. . . . . . . .63/54/0.00 . .60/50/pc . 59/38/sh Baghdad . . . . . . .104/72/0.00 . .108/76/s . 109/78/s Bangkok . . . . . . . .93/81/0.00 . . . 91/78/t . . .90/77/t Beijing. . . . . . . . . .95/66/0.00 . . . 83/64/s . 90/64/pc Beirut . . . . . . . . . .82/72/0.00 . . . 87/75/s . . 85/72/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . . .72/55/0.00 . .65/53/sh . 64/53/sh Bogota . . . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .65/48/sh . 65/51/sh Budapest. . . . . . . .82/63/0.00 . . . 84/57/t . 75/59/sh Buenos Aires. . . . .57/36/0.00 . . .55/42/c . 61/54/pc Cabo San Lucas . .88/70/0.00 . . . 94/71/s . . 95/73/s Cairo . . . . . . . . . . .91/70/0.00 . . . 96/71/s . . 96/70/s Calgary . . . . . . . . .57/43/0.00 . .61/43/sh . 70/51/sh Cancun . . . . . . . . .86/79/0.00 . .88/77/pc . 87/77/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . . .63/45/0.00 . .62/45/pc . . 61/51/c Edinburgh. . . . . . .64/54/0.00 . .57/49/sh . 54/44/sh Geneva . . . . . . . . .72/55/0.00 . .65/54/sh . 67/52/sh Harare. . . . . . . . . .75/45/0.00 . . . 67/40/s . . 60/40/s Hong Kong . . . . . .91/82/0.00 . . . 91/82/t . . .90/81/t Istanbul. . . . . . . . .84/66/0.00 . . . 79/64/s . . 80/70/s Jerusalem . . . . . . .86/62/0.00 . . . 91/68/s . . 86/67/s Johannesburg. . . .48/36/0.00 . . . 53/34/s . . 55/37/s Lima . . . . . . . . . . .75/66/0.00 . . . 73/68/s . 73/68/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . . .73/63/c . 72/61/pc London . . . . . . . . .66/52/0.00 . .61/54/sh . 66/52/sh Madrid . . . . . . . . .82/52/0.00 . . .85/57/c . . 81/55/s Manila. . . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . . 88/79/t . . .89/78/t

Mecca . . . . . . . . .111/86/0.00 . .114/83/s . 110/82/s Mexico City. . . . . .82/55/0.00 . .79/54/pc . . 79/52/s Montreal. . . . . . . .75/50/0.00 . .81/59/pc . 86/65/pc Moscow . . . . . . . .72/52/0.00 . .73/54/pc . 71/54/sh Nairobi . . . . . . . . .79/57/0.00 . . . 72/55/t . 73/52/pc Nassau . . . . . . . . .93/81/0.00 . .92/77/pc . 90/77/pc New Delhi. . . . . .106/82/0.00 . .111/90/s . 111/92/s Osaka . . . . . . . . . .75/68/0.00 . .78/64/pc . 79/69/pc Oslo. . . . . . . . . . . .57/48/0.00 . .59/47/sh . 65/50/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . . .75/48/0.00 . .81/56/pc . 85/65/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . . .66/50/0.00 . . . 67/57/r . 65/55/sh Rio de Janeiro. . . .70/68/0.28 . . . 78/67/t . . .79/69/t Rome. . . . . . . . . . .81/64/0.00 . .80/63/pc . 77/61/sh Santiago . . . . . . . .50/41/0.00 . . .63/47/c . . 59/38/c Sao Paulo . . . . . . .63/54/0.00 . .68/60/sh . . .72/61/t Sapporo . . . . . . . .64/63/0.00 . .68/61/sh . 64/47/sh Seoul. . . . . . . . . . .84/64/0.00 . .85/64/pc . . .83/64/t Shanghai. . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . .87/71/pc . 88/73/pc Singapore . . . . . . .82/73/0.00 . .87/81/pc . . .87/81/t Stockholm. . . . . . .63/48/0.11 . .61/50/sh . . 65/49/c Sydney. . . . . . . . . .61/43/0.00 . .59/50/sh . 59/51/sh Taipei. . . . . . . . . . .91/81/0.00 . . .90/79/c . . .88/78/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . . .84/66/0.00 . . . 93/69/s . . 87/66/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . . .70/64/0.00 . .78/64/sh . 77/63/sh Toronto . . . . . . . . .77/64/0.00 . .85/64/pc . 85/66/pc Vancouver. . . . . . .63/46/0.00 . . .61/54/c . 64/54/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . . .64/55/0.00 . .69/58/sh . 69/55/sh Warsaw. . . . . . . . .73/61/0.00 . .70/58/pc . 69/56/sh


COMMUNITYLIFE THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

SPOTLIGHT State volunteers to be honored Oregon Volunteers is seeking nominations for the Governor’s Volunteer Award, which recognizes individuals, duos, programs and organizations for their dedication in supporting volunteerism in Oregon. Awards are given in both regional and statewide categories. A cash award will be given by presenting sponsor Wells Fargo to a nonprofit chosen by each state and regional award recipient. Nomination forms are available online and must be submitted by June 30. Contact: www .oregonvolunteers .org/events/gva, info@ oregonvolunteers.org, or 888-353-4483 or 503725-5903.

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TV & Movies, C2 Calendar, C3 Horoscope, C3 Milestones, C6 Puzzles, C7

www.bendbulletin.com/community

ESCAPE to the UNDERGROUND

Habitat seeks Guatemala team Bend Area Habitat for Humanity is recruiting a team of 12 volunteers to travel with it to San Juan La Laguna, Guatemala, Nov. 3-11, to build homes for low-income families. Volunteers will help build a basic, four-room, steel-reinforced concrete Guatemalan house, with the opportunity to work alongside the future homeowners and learn more about Guatemalan culture. Volunteers do not need construction experience. Many Guatemalan families live in poorly constructed houses made of unstable materials, including adobe, corrugated metal sheets, wood planks or palm thatching. Others pay more than half of their monthly income on rent or crowd into homes where several families occupy the same small house or room. The trip will include five days of building as well as intercultural activities planned during the trip, which costs $950 per person, plus airfare. Contact: Robin Cooper, rcooper@bend habitat.org or 541-3855387, ext 104.

Photos courtesy Barb Gonzalez

A calcite column, flanked on the left by a stalagmite and on the right by a stalactite, was created by 2½ million years of carbonic acid seepage at the Oregon Caves National Monument. Water has filtered from above, slowly turning into the carbonic acid that dissolves the rock.

Oregon Caves Eugene National Monument

Bend 97

• An exploration of fascinating Oregon Caves National Monument to a small opening in the rocky mountainside, near the point where an underground stream was CAVE JUNCTION — emerging, he heard yelps mixed with barks and t made one heck of a great hunting story. loud snarls. He followed to see what all the comIt was the fall of 1874. Accompanied by his motion was about. hound dog, Bruno, 24-yearKeenly aware of the narrow NORTHWEST TRAVEL size of the hole he was about to old Elijah Davidson had just tracked and shot a deer in a enter, Davidson left his rifle and Next week: Rogue River mountainous region of the Sisammunition outside the portal jet boating kiyou Range south of Grants Pass. and shimmied in, armed with Davidson was preparing to carry only a hunting knife. He turned the animal out when Bruno took off up the hill, a corner into pitch-blackness, reached into his distracted by some other scent. shirt pocket for the box of matches he always Davidson left the deer and went in pursuit of his carried, and lit one. canine friend, whose baying was becoming mufA whole new world unfolded before his eyes. See Caves / C4 fled and distant. Just as he had traced the sound By John Gottberg Anderson For the Bulletin

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Coos Bay

OREGON

Roseburg

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Grants Pass

Cave Junction CALIFORNIA

Crater Lake National Park Medford

Klamath Falls 97

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Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

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“This is living rock. It continues to grow and change.” — Derek Neis, park ranger at Oregon Caves National Monument

Register for cystic fibrosis walk Registration is under way for a walk in Redmond to help fight cystic fibrosis. The Central Oregon Great Strides Walkathon will take place June 16 starting from Sam Johnson Park, along Southwest Evergreen Avenue. On-site registration starts at 3:30 p.m. and the 5K walk begins an hour later along the Dry Canyon Trail. The cost to participate is a donation. Registration is also available online. The event will raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease, affecting roughly 30,000 people in the U.S. Nearly 1 in 31 adults is a symptomless carrier. Contact: www.cff .org/greatstrides, great strides.redmond@gmail .com or 541-480-6703.

Park Ranger Derek Neis uses a small flashlight to indicate subterranean features to a party of cave explorers, 220 feet below the Earth’s surface. Visitors go up and down 526 steps and duck-walk through some passageways with ceilings only 3½ feet high.

A PURR-FECT COMPANION

CRAFT program pairs cats with seniors

St. Vincent expands hours

By Mac McLean

The St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store in Redmond has expanded its store hours. The nonprofit thrift store is now open daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. It offers everything from books to clothing. The store is located at 1616 Veterans Way. Contact: 541-5049840.

It was a match made in heaven. Kathleen Boyle, a 62-year-old retired kindergarten teacher, was living in an apartment where she’d been by herself since her only companion, Leo, a 13-year-old black and white cat, died of cancer five years ago. Meanwhile, Andrew, a 14-year-old black cat with no teeth, was biding his time with dozens of other animals at the Cat Rescue, Adoption and Foster Team’s no-kill animal

— From staff reports

Heart-shaped moon milk, on the ceiling of the Imagination Room, is a calcite precipitate that doesn’t fully harden, but mutates into a variety of odd shapes. Most active in winter, when increased moisture feeds bacteria, moon milk has a texture similar to that of cottage cheese.

The Bulletin

shelter off Tumalo Road near Bend. The two met each other and enjoyed a short but memorable relationship thanks to a CRAFT program that pairs seniors, the disabled and veterans with adoptable adult cats for free. It lasted only a year, but it was a year neither of them would forget. “He was the greatest companion that anybody could ever want,” Boyle said as she looked back on the time she spent with Andrew. “He played, he slept in my bed, and he sat next to me whenever I was on the

couch.”

The program Bonnie Baker, CRAFT’s founder and director, noticed something different about her elderly mother when she had a companion cat. “Having a cat was often my mother’s reason for getting out of bed in the morning,” Baker wrote in an email as she described the impact a pet can have on a person who would otherwise be alone. “It enhances (someone’s life) and gives the cat See CRAFT / C7

Submitted photo

Pickle Pete, a 1½-year-old cat with only four teeth, found a home with Bend’s Chris Crawford thanks to a program managed by the Cat Rescue, Adoption and Foster team that matches older cats with seniors, people with disabilities, and veterans free of charge.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

TV & M Meloni sinks his teeth into ‘True Blood’ role

L M T FOR SUNDAY, JUNE 10

EXPECTING (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:55, 6:20, 9:05

BEND the strange occurrences that happened this year on “Mad Men,� which wraps up a very offbeat Season 5.

By Chuck Barney Contra Costa Times

“True Blood� 9 p.m. Sunday, HBO After a 12-year run on “Hollywood Heights� “Law & Order: SVU,� Chris- 9 p.m. Monday, Nickelodeon topher Meloni grows a pair of “Hollywood Heights� folfangs. In Season 5 of the su- lows the journey of a teen pernatural sensation, he plays girl (Brittany Underwood) Roman, the charismatic, 500- whose life changes drasticalyear-old leader ly when she beof the Vampire TV SPOTLIGHT comes a star and Authority, who falls in love with craves a peaceful her pop-music coexistence between humans idol (Cody Longo). The show and bloodsuckers. Unfortu- was adapted from a popular nately, his fractious commu- Mexican telenovela. nity includes a lot of rebels “Thorne� who want to go back to the 9 p.m. Tuesday, Encore dark ages and use humans David Morrissey plays the for late-night snacks. Clearly, title character in “Thorne,� a they must be put down. new adaptation of Mark Bill“The 66th Annual ingham’s crime fiction series. Tony Awards� In the opening episode, In8 p.m. Sunday, CBS spector Tom Thorne tries to Neil Patrick Harris re- track down a ruthless predaturns to host “The 66th An- tor while confronting nightnual Tony Awards,� the gala mares from his own past. that celebrates Broadway’s best. Looking to collect lots “Dallas� 9 p.m. Wednesday, TNT of shiny trophies is the muWEDNESDAY: J.R., sical “Once,� which leads all Bobby and Sue Ellen Ewshows with 11 nominations. ing (Larry Hagman, Patrick “Untamed Americas� Duffy, Linda Gray) may be 9 p.m. Sunday, National older now, but some things Geographic never change: In a lively Breathtaking photogra- “Dallas� reboot, battles for phy is featured throughout power and love still go on at “Untamed Americas,� a doc- Southfork Ranch, even as umentary series that focuses a new generation assumes on nature’s daily battles for control. survival. Narrated by Josh “41� Brolin, the program takes 9 p.m. Thursday, HBO viewers on an incredible “41� is a new documentary journey across North, Centhat offers “a rare, intimate tral and South America. glimpse� of the life of George “Mad Men� H.W. Bush, our 41st presi10 p.m. Sunday, AMC dent. Bush shares anecdotes Betty got fat. Roger got from his childhood, family, high. Pete got his butt kicked. service in World War II and And those were just a few of political career.

4;15, 6:45, 9:15 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 1, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15

Regal Pilot Butte 6

McMenamins Old St. Francis School

2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

BERNIE (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 THE BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 CROOKED ARROWS (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 FOR GREATER GLORY (R) Noon, 3, 6 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 SOUND OF MY VOICE (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45

THE CABIN IN THE WOODS (R) 9:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (R) 2:30, 6 MIRROR MIRROR (PG) Noon After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

BATTLESHIP (PG-13) 12:10, 3:25, 6:35, 9:40 CHERNOBYL DIARIES (R) 9:35 DARK SHADOWS (PG-13) 12:25, 3:50, 6:45 THE DICTATOR (R) 1:25, 4:40, 8, 10:30 THE HUNGER GAMES (PG-13) 12:50, 4 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 12:15, 1:15, 3:30, 4:30, 6:50, 7:50, 9:15 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED 3-D (PG) 12:40, 3:55, 7:30, 10, 10:15 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:30, 9:50 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS 3-D (PG13) Noon, 3:15, 7, 10:20 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 3:10, 6:40, 9:25 MEN IN BLACK 3 3-D (PG-13) 12:55, 4:20, 7:40, 10:10 PROMETHEUS (R) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:10, 9:20 PROMETHEUS IMAX (R) 12:30, 3:40, 7:05, 10:05 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 1:05, 2:50, 4:10, 6, 7:20, 9, 10:30 WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU’RE

EDITOR’S NOTES: • Open-captioned showtimes are bold. • There may be an additional fee for 3-D movies. • IMAX films are $15. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

SISTERS Sisters Movie House

Tin Pan Theater

720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800

CHIMPANZEE (G) 3:30 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 3, 5, 7:15 MEN IN BLACK 3(PG-13) 5:30, 8 PROMETHEUS (R) 2:15, 5, 7:45 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 2, 4:45, 7:30

869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

BUT I’M A CHEERLEADER (R) 5:30 FISH OUT OF WATER (no MPAA rating) 3 HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH (R) 8

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 9:30 PROMETHEUS (R) 11:15 a.m., 1:45,

Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED 3-D (PG) Noon, 4:50, 7 MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 2:10, 9:20 MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 MEN IN BLACK 3 (PG-13) 12:10, 2:25, 4:40, 7:10, 9:35 PROMETHEUS (R) 11:45 a.m., 4:15, 6:50 PROMETHEUS 3-D (R) 2:15, 9:15 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (PG-13) 1:25, 4:05, 6:40, 9:25

for appointments call 541-382-4900

Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

MADAGASCAR 3: EUROPE’S MOST WANTED (PG) 11 a.m., 1:15, 3:30, 6, 8:10 SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 1, 4, 7

MADRAS

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

PRINEVILLE

Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

PETUNIA

Look at that nose! Petunia is a 7 year old cat and is cute as a button and eager to find her purr-fect match. She was brought to the shelter after her owners moved and left her behind. Pretty Petunia is as mellow as you can be without being lazy. She enjoys playing with her toys and then curling up in a nice warm lap. If you think she sounds like the pet for you, come down and adopt her today!

HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON/SPCA 61170 S.E. 27th St. BEND (541) 382-3537

Sponsored by Cascade Mortgage - Tim Maher

L TV L SUNDAY PRIME TIME 6/10/12

*In HD, these channels run three hours ahead. / Sports programming may vary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine

ALSO IN HD; ADD 600 TO CHANNEL No.

BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS

BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW KTVZDT2 , _ # / OPBPL 175 173

5:00

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KATU News World News Grey’s Anatomy ’ ‘14’ Ă… Paid Program Evening News Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ ‘PG’ NUMB3RS ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Alone in the Wilderness, Part 2 NewsChannel 8 at 5PM (N) Ă… (4:00) ››› “Garden Stateâ€? Alone in the Wilderness, Part 2

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KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Ă… America’s Funniest Home Videos Secret Millionaire (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition Jacqui (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… News Nightly News Dateline NBC A murdered high school valedictorian. (N) ’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… The Unit Secret reunion. ’ ‘14’ 60 Minutes (N) ’ Ă… The 66th Annual Tony Awards (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… KEZI 9 News World News America’s Funniest Home Videos Secret Millionaire (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition Jacqui (N) ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Bones ’ ‘14’ Ă… American Dad Cleveland Show The Simpsons Bob’s Burgers Family Guy ‘14’ American Dad News Two/Half Men Billy McLaughlin: Starry Night with Orchestra Nova Il Volo Takes Flight ’ ‘G’ Ă… Masterpiece Mystery! Sherlock searches for a woman’s killer. ‘PG’ Nightly News Straight Talk Dateline NBC A murdered high school valedictorian. (N) ’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… America’s Got Talent ‘PG’ Ă… King of Queens King of Queens Heartland Miracle ’ ‘PG’ ›› “Clockstoppersâ€? (2002) Jesse Bradford, French Stewart. Ă… Meet, Browns Meet, Browns Billy McLaughlin: Starry Night with Orchestra Nova Il Volo Takes Flight ’ ‘G’ Ă… Masterpiece Mystery! Sherlock searches for a woman’s killer. ‘PG’

11:00

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KATU News (11:35) Cars.TV News Love-Raymond News Cold Case ‘14’ KEZI 9 News The Insider ‘PG’ Big Bang Big Bang Dr. Wayne Dyer: Wishes Fulfilled NewsChannel 8 Sports Sunday Troubadour, TX ’ Ă… Qi Gong: Deeper Flow With Lee

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

Criminal Minds Safe Haven ‘14’ Criminal Minds 25 to Life ’ ‘14’ Criminal Minds ’ ‘14’ Ă… The Glades (N) ‘14’ Ă… Longmire The Dark Road (N) ‘14’ (11:01) Longmire ‘14’ Ă… *A&E 130 28 18 32 Criminal Minds ’ ‘14’ Ă… (2:31) ››› “The Patriotâ€? (2000) Mel › “The Reapingâ€? (2007) Hilary Swank, David Morrissey. Premiere. A former The Killing Bulldog Sarah and Holder The Killing Donnie or Marie The killer Mad Men The Phantom There are op- (11:04) The Pitch Autograph Collec*AMC 102 40 39 Gibson, Heath Ledger. Ă… Christian missionary debunks religious phenomena. Ă… go on the run. ‘14’ Ă… is within reach. (N) ’ ‘14’ portunities for everyone. ‘14’ tion’s agency of record. (N) Tanked: Unfiltered ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Tanked ’ ‘PG’ Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Call-Wildman Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Call of Wildman Call-Wildman *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Tanked: Unfiltered ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Orange County Social Housewives/OC Don’t Be Tardy The Real Housewives of New York City Ă… Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ BRAVO 137 44 My Big Redneck Vacation ‘PG’ Redneck Island Welcome To Redneck Island ‘PG’ 2012 CMT Music Awards From the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… My Big Redneck Vacation ‘PG’ Big Redneck CMT 190 32 42 53 Big Redneck The Coffee Addiction American Greed Filthy Rich Biography on CNBC J.W. Marriott American Greed Paid Program LightVac CNBC 51 36 40 52 Biography on CNBC J.W. Marriott Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) Global Lessons: The GPS Road Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom Global Lessons: The GPS Road CNN 52 38 35 48 Global Lessons: The GPS Road (6:10) Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos ‘14’ Ă… Jeff Dunham: Arguing (8:45) Jeff Dunham: Controlled Chaos ‘14’ Ă… Jeff Dunham: Arguing (11:20) Tosh.0 COM 135 53 135 47 (4:06) ›› “Without a Paddleâ€? (4:30) City Club of Central Oregon Talk of the Town Local issues. Cooking Oregon Joy of Fishing Journal Get Outdoors Visions of NW The Yoga Show The Yoga Show Talk of the Town Local issues. COTV 11 British Road to the White House Q&A British Road to the White House Washington This Week CSPAN 58 20 12 11 Q & A A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Shake It Up! ‘G’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ Shake It Up! ‘G’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… Good-Charlie Austin & Ally ’ Jessie ‘G’ Ă… A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie MythBusters Blind Driving ’ ‘PG’ MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… MythBusters Duel Dilemmas ‘PG’ Head Games Moral Dilemma ‘14’ (11:01) MythBusters ‘PG’ Ă… *DISC 156 21 16 37 MythBusters ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Mrs. Eastwood Mrs. Eastwood Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Keeping Up With the Kardashians Mrs. Eastwood Mrs. Eastwood Chelsea Lately The Soup ‘14’ *E! 136 25 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter Ă… SportsCenter Ă… ESPN 21 23 22 23 MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers at Cincinnati Reds From Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. (N) (Live) College Baseball NCAA Tournament, Super Regional -- Texas Christian vs. UCLA (N) (Live) Ă… 2012 UEFA European Championship Spain vs. Italy (N) Ă… ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Baseball: NCAA Tournament, Super Regional (7:15) ››› “The Year of the Yaoâ€? (2004, Documentary) Ă… MLB Baseball From June 10, 1997. Ă… SportsCentury Ă… ESPNC 23 25 123 25 (4:00) 30 for 30 ››› “The Year of the Yaoâ€? (2004) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. H-Lite Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124 203 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Ă… ››› “Aladdinâ€? (1992) Voices of Scott Weinger, Robin Williams. ››› “Ratatouilleâ€? (2007, Comedy) Voices of Patton Oswalt, Ian Holm, Lou Romano. FAM 67 29 19 41 ››› “Finding Nemoâ€? (2003, Comedy) Voices of Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres. Fox News Sunday Geraldo at Large (N) ‘PG’ Ă… Huckabee Stossel Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Fox News Sunday FNC 54 61 36 50 Huckabee (N) Diners, Drive Food Network Star ‘G’ Cupcake Champions Grand Finale Food Network Star: Guy Live (N) Diners, Drive Chopped Grilltastic! *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Mystery Diners Invention Hun. Diners, Drive (3:30) ››› “Kung Fu Pandaâ€? ›› “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquelâ€? (2009, Comedy) ››› “Madagascar: Escape 2 Africaâ€? (2008) Voices of Ben Stiller. ›› “Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquelâ€? (2009, Comedy) FX 131 For Rent ’ ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l Holmes on Homes ‘G’ Ă… Holmes Inspection ’ ‘G’ Ă… Holmes Inspection ‘G’ Ă… Holmes Inspection ‘G’ Ă… Holmes on Homes ‘G’ Ă… HGTV 176 49 33 43 For Rent ’ ‘G’ Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ă… Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ă… Ice Road Truckers ‘14’ Ă… Ice Road Truckers (N) ‘14’ Ă… (10:01) Swamp People ‘PG’ Ă… (11:01) Mountain Men ‘PG’ Ă… *HIST 155 42 41 36 Ancient Aliens ‘PG’ Ă… “Who Killed Allison Parks?â€? (2011) Sean Patrick Flanery. Ă… Drop Dead Diva Home (N) ‘PG’ The Client List Acting Up (N) ‘14’ “Who Killed Allison Parks?â€? Ă… LIFE 138 39 20 31 ›› “The Stepfatherâ€? (2009) Dylan Walsh, Sela Ward. Ă… Caught on Camera Sex Bunker Inside the Box: Interrogation (N) The Confessions of a Serial Killer Sex Bunker MSNBC 56 59 128 51 Caught on Camera Fury Teen Mom Maci and Ryan fight over custody. ‘PG’ Teen Mom Pros & Cons ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Teen Wolf Omega ’ ‘14’ Teen Wolf Shape Shifted ’ ‘14’ 2012 MTV Movie Awards ’ ‘14’ MTV 192 22 38 57 Teen Mom Stay With Me ’ ‘PG’ SpongeBob “Ragsâ€? (2012, Musical) Max Schneider, Keke Palmer. ’ ‘G’ Ă… My Wife & Kids My Wife-Kids George Lopez George Lopez Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Yes, Dear ‘PG’ Friends ’ ‘14’ Friends ’ ‘14’ NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Oprah’s Next Chapter ’ ‘PG’ Oprah’s Next Chapter (N) ’ Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Oprah’s Next Chapter ’ OWN 161 103 31 103 Our America With Lisa Ling ‘14’ Bensinger Bull Riding CBR West Texas Shootout Sports Unlimited The Game 365 MLB Baseball Los Angeles Dodgers at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Golden Age ›› “The Wolfmanâ€? (2010, Horror) Benicio Del Toro, Anthony Hopkins. Premiere. ’ ›› “The Wolfmanâ€? (2010) Benicio Del Toro. ’ SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (3:24) ››› “Casinoâ€? (1995, Crime Drama) Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci. Premiere. ’ ›› “Angels & Demonsâ€? (2009) Tom Hanks. Robert Langdon confronts an ancient brotherhood. Ă… ›› “The Devil’s Advocateâ€? (1997) Keanu Reeves. An attorney goes to work at a law firm run by Satan. SYFY 133 35 133 45 (3:30) ›› “The Villageâ€? (2004) Joel Osteen Kerry Shook BelieverVoice Creflo Dollar ›› “The Ten Commandmentsâ€? (2006) Dougray Scott. Moses leads the Israelites to the Promised Land. ‘PG’ Secrets › “Megiddoâ€? (2001, Suspense) TBN 205 60 130 › “Rush Hour 3â€? (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. Ă… ›› “Paul Blart: Mall Copâ€? (2009, Comedy) Kevin James. Premiere. ›› “Paul Blart: Mall Copâ€? (2009) Kevin James, Jayma Mays. *TBS 16 27 11 28 (4:00) ›› “Starsky & Hutchâ€? ›››› “The Wizard of Ozâ€? (1939) Judy Garland, Frank Morgan. A tornado ››› “Meet Me in St. Louisâ€? (1944, Musical) Judy Garland. A disappointed St. ››› “Easter Paradeâ€? (1948) Judy Garland, Fred Astaire. A dancer grooms a ››› “Summer Stockâ€? (1950) Judy TCM 101 44 101 29 whisks a Kansas farm girl to a magic land. Ă… (DVS) Louis family may miss the World’s Fair. Ă… (DVS) replacement for his former partner. Ă… (DVS) Garland, Gene Kelly. Ă… Little People, Big World Little People Big World: Holiday Amy’s 50th Birthday Sister Wives (N) Sister Wives (N) American Gypsy Wedding Sister Wives ’ Sister Wives ’ *TLC 178 34 32 34 Little People: Big Changes ›› “The Book of Eliâ€? (2010, Action) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. Ă… ›› “The Book of Eliâ€? (2010, Action) Denzel Washington, Gary Oldman. Ă… *TNT 17 26 15 27 (4:30) ››› “Die Hard With a Vengeanceâ€? (1995) Bruce Willis. Ă… Johnny Test ’ Total Drama ›› “Spy Kids 3-D: Game Overâ€? (2003) Antonio Banderas. Level Up ‘PG’ Level Up ‘PG’ Venture Bros. King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ Loiter Squad *TOON 84 Toy Hunters ‘G’ Ă… Sand Masters Sand Masters Hotel Impossible ‘G’ Ă… Bggage Battles Bggage Battles Best Sandwich Best Sandwich Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ *TRAV 179 51 45 42 Deep Fried ‘G’ Ă… M*A*S*H ‘PG’ M*A*S*H ‘PG’ (6:32) M*A*S*H (7:05) M*A*S*H (7:43) M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Ă… (8:21) M*A*S*H Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Everybody Loves Raymond ‘PG’ King of Queens King of Queens TVLND 65 47 29 35 M*A*S*H ‘PG’ Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU › “Couples Retreatâ€? (2009, Comedy) Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman. Ă… › “Couples Retreatâ€? (2009) Vince Vaughn. Ă… USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ Mob Wives Chicago (N) ’ ‘14’ Tough Love: New Orleans (N) ‘14’ Mob Wives Chicago ’ ‘14’ Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ VH1 191 48 37 54 Tough Love: New Orleans ’ ‘14’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(5:40) ››› “The Mask of Zorroâ€? 1998 Antonio Banderas. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… ›› “The Green Hornetâ€? 2011, Action Seth Rogen. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… “A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriorsâ€? The Frighteners ENCR 106 401 306 401 Blade Run FXM Presents ›› “Mr. & Mrs. Smithâ€? 2005, Action Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie. ‘PG-13’ Ă… FXM Presents ››› “Live Free or Die Hardâ€? 2007, Action Bruce Willis, Justin Long. ‘PG-13’ Ă… FXM Presents FMC 104 204 104 120 Live Free-Die (4:00) The Ultimate Fighter Live ’ The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil UFC: Johnson vs. McCall From Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The Ultimate Fighter Live ’ FUEL 34 LPGA Tour Golf Wegmans LPGA Championship, Final Round From Pittsford, N.Y. Golf Central (N) PGA Tour Golf Champions: Regions Tradition, Final Round GOLF 28 301 27 301 PGA Tour Golf ››› “The Parent Trapâ€? (1998, Comedy) Lindsay Lohan, Dennis Quaid, Natasha Richardson. Ă… Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘G’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ HALL 66 33 175 33 (4:00) ››› “The Parent Trapâ€? (1998) Lindsay Lohan. Ă… (4:30) “Hemingway & Gellhornâ€? 2012, Docudrama Clive Owen. Writers Ernest (7:10) ›› “The Hangover Part IIâ€? 2011 Bradley Cooper. Phil, Stu, Alan and True Blood Sookie and Lafayette Veep Tears (N) ’ Girls Leave Me True Blood Sookie and Lafayette HBO 425 501 425 501 Hemingway and Martha Gellhorn begin a romance. ’ Ă… Doug head to Thailand for Stu’s wedding. ’ ‘R’ Ă… clean up a mess. (N) ‘MA’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… Alone (N) ‘MA’ clean up a mess. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ››› “Apocalyptoâ€? 2006 Rudy Youngblood. The end of the Mayan civilization draws near. ‘R’ Comedy Bang! Bunk ‘14’ ››› “Night of the Living Deadâ€? 1968, Horror Duane Jones. ‘NR’ ››› “Apocalyptoâ€? 2006 ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (4:20) ›› “Due Dateâ€? 2010 Robert (7:45) ››› “Bridesmaidsâ€? 2011, Comedy Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Rose Byrne. A maid of ›› “2 Days in the Valleyâ€? 1996, Crime Drama Danny ›››› “Titanicâ€? 1997, Historical Drama Leonardo DiCaprio. A woman falls for MAX 400 508 508 Downey Jr. ’ ‘R’ Ă… Aiello, Glenne Headly. ’ ‘R’ Ă… honor’s life unravels as the big day approaches. ’ ‘NR’ Ă… an artist aboard the ill-fated ship. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… The Whale That Ate Jaws ‘PG’ Untamed Americas (N) ‘PG’ Untamed Americas Deserts ‘PG’ Untamed Americas ‘PG’ Untamed Americas Deserts ‘PG’ The Whale That Ate Jaws ‘PG’ The Whale That Exploded ‘PG’ NGC 157 157 Power Rangers Planet Sheen Wild Grinders Odd Parents Odd Parents Legend-Korra Odd Parents SpongeBob SpongeBob Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Invader ZIM ’ Invader ZIM ’ NTOON 89 115 189 115 Legend-Korra Realtree Truth Hunting Friends of NRA Bone Collector Hunt Masters Your Weapon Hunt Adventure Realtree Wildgame Ntn Mathews Wardens Operation Rogers Pass OUTD 37 307 43 307 Hunt Adventure Wildgame Ntn (3:45) ››› “A “No Look Passâ€? 2011 Emily Tay strives for success. on The Borgias Juan tries to spin his The Big C Killjoy Nurse Jackie ’ Nurse Jackie (N) The Big C Vaya The Borgias Alexander prepares to Nurse Jackie ’ The Big C Vaya SHO 500 500 Single Manâ€? ‘R’ and off basketball courts. ‘NR’ combat injury. ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… Con Dios ‘MA’ end his fast. (N) ’ ‘MA’ Ă… ‘MA’ Ă… Con Dios ‘MA’ ’ ‘MA’ Ă… Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain Guys Garage Car Crazy ‘G’ Formula One Formula One Racing Canadian Grand Prix (N) Formula One NCWTS Setup NASCAR Racing SPEED 35 303 125 303 NASCAR Victory Lane (7:20) ››› “13 Going on 30â€? 2004 ‘PG-13’ Ă… ›› “The Karate Kidâ€? 2010, Drama Jaden Smith, Jackie Chan. ’ ‘PG’ Ă… Jumping Broom STARZ 300 408 300 408 (4:50) ››› “As Good as It Getsâ€? 1997 Jack Nicholson. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… (4:35) › “Celtic Prideâ€? 1996 Damon (6:15) “Daydream Nationâ€? 2010 Kat Dennings. A bored teenager has affairs ›› “Beastlyâ€? 2011 Alex Pettyfer. A teen must find true ››› “The Italian Jobâ€? 2003, Crime Drama Mark Wahlberg. A thief and his › “PiĂąata: Survival TMC 525 525 Wayans. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… with her teacher and a stoner classmate. ’ ‘R’ Ă… love to break a curse. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… crew plan to steal back their gold. ’ ‘PG-13’ Ă… Islandâ€? ‘R’ Cycling Tour de Suisse, Stage 1 Cycling Tour de Suisse, Stage 2 Beach Volleyball ›› “American Flyersâ€? (1985, Drama) Kevin Costner, David Grant. Poker After Dark Cash 200K NBCSN 27 58 30 209 Cycling Bridezillas Where Are Th. Bridezillas (N) ‘14’ Ă… Kendra on Top Workin’ It Bridezillas Where Are Th. Bridezillas ‘14’ Ă… My Fair Wedding *WE 143 41 174 118 Bridezillas Where Are


SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A & A

Couple hesitant to confess living arrangements to priest Dear Abby: My fiancĂŠe, “Jenny,â€? and I are being married next year. Jenny is a devout Catholic and is having a difficult time coming to terms with the fact that we’re living together. We recently moved out of state as a result of job transfers and — for purely economic reasons — moved in together. Now that we’re about to be married, Jenny is beside herself with what to tell her new parish priest because she’s afraid he will refuse to marry us if she reveals that we’re living together. Abby, I love Jenny very much, and I’m concerned that this is going to cause problems between us. She’s considering not telling the priest that we live together because she feels he wouldn’t understand. I’m inclined to agree. Before we moved, we were living separately. Any advice would be helpful. — Living in Sin in St. Louis Dear Living in Sin: I don’t know what the policies are in St. Louis, but some dioceses will not marry couples who cohabitate unless they first separate. You and your fiancĂŠe should go to the priest, explain the entire situation, including the economic reasons for your living together, and tell him you would like to be married. It may not be as bad as Jenny fears. The alternative, starting married life with a lie, is worse than separating temporarily. Dear Abby: My husband of many years has asked me to promise him that I won’t inform his family and adult children when he dies. He wants no funeral or obituary — nothing to mark his passing. I am concerned because his health isn’t good and I must decide soon if I can make that promise. His adult children and their families rarely call, visit or

This year you will experience a special or unique friendship. If you are single, this bond could become more. You often overthink situations and become negative. Don’t. You will start the first year of a 12-year luck cycle in the next few months. If you are attached, appreciate the special qualities in your sweetie. Given time, that attitude could become more reciprocal. You might be eyeing a change to your home and domestic life, no matter what your status is. Be open to change. PISCES has very different concerns from you, yet you can relate to each other with mutual respect. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH You might wake up and still be tired. This is no surprise, as you have been doing a rerun of a situation in your dreams. Consider adapting your plans to your needs. There is a tendency to go way overboard right now. If you do, enjoy yourself. Tonight: Put 100 percent into the moment. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Join your friends, even if there is a last-minute invitation involved. Once you start to relax, there might not be a way for others to predict what you will do next. Someone pushes to have his or her way. Let this person take the lead. Tonight: Live for now. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Many people like the way you naturally jump in and take control of situations. One situation in particular might need to be thought through again, if the other party demonstrates the ability to give in just a little. Tonight: In the limelight. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You mull over an issue and come up with a much different answer from a partner, family member or friends. You can go to extremes very easily. Today, you will note this tendency. Know that you might not need to change it. Tonight: Enjoy the one you are with. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Discuss a situation more openly and see what occurs. You could be pushed to redo an errand or finish up a project. You know where you want to be. What will

C C Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY DEAR ABBY write to him. They never send a greeting card for any occasion. The only time he hears from them is when they want something. He says that since they don’t care about him while he’s living, they won’t care when he dies. I feel torn about this. Only a few members of his family like me. I don’t want to cause more hard feelings. Were my husband to die next week, I would be hard-pressed to obey his final wish. I would want to notify those few family members who would be hurt if I didn’t. Please print this. Perhaps his children will see it and change their ways. But please don’t mention my name or town. — Between a Rock and a Hard Place Dear Between: While I understand your husband’s desire that his children, who show no concern for him, not be notified in the event of his death, I do not agree that they should not be told of their father’s passing. People who feel the need to mourn should be allowed to work through their grief and achieve closure. And you’re right, failure to notify them will only fuel the fire of resentment they already feel for you. In spite of their inattentiveness, the children should be notified of their father’s death, whether there is to be a funeral or not. If you wish to have a memorial service of some kind to enable you and those you care about to grieve, you should be entitled to have a private one. His children can hold their own service if they need the closure. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope: Happy Birthday for Sunday, June 10, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar

C3

it take to make that so? Once you cross the line, you could be way overdue. Tonight: With a loved one. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You are pretty easygoing and know how to defer to others. When you do this, you learn a lot more about the people you are dealing with. Wherever you are, you seem to enjoy yourself. Tonight: Let your hair down, as if it were Friday eve. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Go for a hike or have a picnic with a loved one or dear friend. Your level personality allows this person to talk about whatever he or she wants or needs to. The exchange alone adds more depth to the bond that already exists between you. Tonight: Give it all you’ve got. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHHH Whether you’re with a child, loved one or both, let your imagination emerge. Your childlike side delights many people when they see it, especially since you are so serious-minded at times. Still, a discussion could be quite deep. Tonight: Be frivolous, as hard as it might be. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Deal with a serious matter before going out or getting together with friends and/or a loved one. You will relax more and have a better time. Make it OK to go a little overboard. Tonight: Try to head in at a reasonable hour. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Discussions involve someone’s innate demand. You most likely will not be speaking to the person in question. Keep the gossip to a minimum. Listen to your instincts with a neighbor; you will be right-on. Tonight: Make it early. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH There might be times when you need to let others take the initiative. You will feel better knowing where others are coming from. Do not hesitate to just be yourself. Be a little self-indulgent, but know when to pull back. Tonight: Treat a friend to munchies. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Someone might be angry, but make that OK. You have a unique ability to enjoy yourself. Go off and join a friend or close relative. A friendship or relationship is changing. Try not to judge this person. Tonight: As you like. Š 2011 by King Features Syndicate

GARDEN FAIR: Vendors sell crafts, arts and plants; with school tours; free admission; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-389-4854, grivera@ saintfrancisschool.net or www. saintfrancisschool.net. SISTERS ART IN THE PARK: Featuring arts, crafts and a silent auction benefiting the Make-AWish Foundation of Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Avenue; 541-420-0279 or centraloregonshows@gmail.com. RAPTORS OF THE DESERT SKY: See hawks, owls and other raptors soaring through a forest clearing, and hear a biologist talk about the birds; daily through Labor Day; $3 or $2 members, plus museum admission; free ages 4 and younger; 11:30 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. FIDDLERS JAM: Listen or dance at the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Jam; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-447-7395. SISTERS RODEO: Featuring a buckaroo breakfast and a PRCA rodeo performance with roping, riding, steer wrestling and more; $12-$18; 7-11 a.m. breakfast, 1 p.m. rodeo; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. “SOCIAL SECURITY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents a comedy about a couple whose tranquility is destroyed by family members; $20, $15 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. “THE SNOW QUEEN�: Redmond School of Dance presents the ballet; $12 or $6 ages 11 and younger in advance, $14 or $8 children at the door; 2 p.m.; Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-548-6957 or www.redmondschoolofdance. com. SECOND SUNDAY: Robert McDowell and Ellen Waterston read from a selection of their works; followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendar. SUMMER SUNDAY CONCERT: The folk-rock act Poor Moon performs; free; 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-322-9383 or www. bendconcerts.com. FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS: Featuring displays of paintings, quilts, jewelry and more; with a performance of a play called “Noah’s Flood�; free; 3 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3367 or www.redmondcpc.org. SUNRIVER MUSIC FESTIVAL YOUNG ARTIST SCHOLARSHIP CONCERT: A showcase of the top 2012 Young Artist Scholarship recipients; $10 suggested donation; 5 p.m.; Holy Trinity Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road; 541-593-9310, tickets@ sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org. “THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (ABRIDGED)�: Innovation Theatre Works presents the humorous adaptation of 37 Shakespeare plays in 90 minutes; $15, $12 students and seniors; 6 p.m.; Innovation Theatre Works, 1155 S.W. Division St., Bend; 541-5046721 or www.innovationtw.org. MICKEY AVALON: The hip-hop act performs, with Millionaires and Maintain; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com. RUBEDO: The Denver-based rock band performs, with The Hoot Hoots; free; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-7280879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.

MONDAY CASCADE CHORALE: The group performs “Carmina Burana,� poems set to music, under the direction of James Knox; donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-383-7512, jwknox@cocc. edu or http://cascadechorale.org.

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin file photo

Cascade Chorale director James Knox will lead the group in a performance at 7 p.m. Monday at Bend High School.

TUESDAY TUESDAY MARKET AT EAGLE CREST: Free admission; 2-6 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-633-9637 or info@sustainableflame.com. “SLOW LEARNERS�: Richard Clinton talks about “Two Hundred Years of Unheeded Warnings�; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121037 or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendar. TYLER FORTIER: The Eugene-based Americana artist performs, with Gregory Rawlins and Mike Surber; free; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.

WEDNESDAY KENGARDEN 2012 ROOTS TOUR: America’s best kendama players show off their tricks; free; 1-5 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-6337205 or http://wabisabibend.com. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or http://bendfarmersmarket.com. PICKIN’ AND PADDLIN’ MUSIC SERIES: Includes boat demonstrations in the Deschutes River, and music by bluegrass act Pitchfork Revolution; proceeds

benefit Bend Paddle Trail Alliance; free; 4-7 p.m. demonstrations, 7-10 p.m. music; Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407. “THE METROPOLITAN OPERA, ANNA BOLENA�: Starring Anna Netrebko, Ekaterina Gubanova, Jane Seymour and Ildar Abdrazakov in an encore presentation of Donizetti’s masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $12.50; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. “QUEEN OF THE SUN�: Slow Food High Desert presents a screening of the film, preceded by a potluck dinner; free; 7 p.m., dinner at 6:15 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-390-5362. REDWOOD SON: The Portland-based Americana act performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. “SOCIAL SECURITY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents a comedy about a couple whose tranquility is destroyed by family members; $20, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. “THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (ABRIDGED)�: Innovation Theatre Works presents the humorous adaptation of 37 Shakespeare plays in 90 minutes; $15, $12 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; Innovation

Theatre Works, 1155 S.W. Division St., Bend; 541-504-6721 or www. innovationtw.org.

THURSDAY BILLY MANZIK: The California-based folk rocker performs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Bend Brewing Company, 1019 N.W. Brooks St.; 541-383-1599. THE SINGING CHEF: Celebrity chef Andy LoRusso demonstrates cooking techniques and provides samples; proceeds benefit the Assistance League of Bend; $35; 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. HANZ ARAKI & KATHRYN CLAIRE: The Irish fiddle duo performs, with Chris Hayes; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. “SOCIAL SECURITY�: Cascades Theatrical Company presents a comedy about a couple whose tranquility is destroyed by family members; $20, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. “THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (ABRIDGED)�: Innovation Theatre Works presents the humorous adaptation of 37 Shakespeare plays in 90 minutes; $15, $12 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; Innovation Theatre Works, 1155 S.W. Division St., Bend; 541-504-6721 or www. innovationtw.org.


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Caves Continued from C1 A limestone cavern, its calcite formations lined with marble, stretched beyond him into unknown depths. Davidson gasped as he beheld its stalactites, its draperies, its spurs of “cave popcorn.” But still he could hear Bruno in trouble in the distance, and so he pursued, lighting one match after another and marveling at the sights that surrounded him. Then he ran out of matches. The dog would have to save himself. Luckily for him, Davidson’s ears could discern a trickle of water running within the cave. Now on hands and knees, he located the stream and followed it until he could see a distant light. After a three-hour adventure, he emerged to stare into a pair of big brown eyes: Bruno was waiting for him. Only slightly worse for wear, the dog limped home beside his master to the hamlet of Williams. Davidson shared the story with his disbelieving family, then returned the next morning accompanied by his brother-in-law. Outside the cave entrance, they found the abandoned deer, partially eaten — and lying beside it, a large black bear, sound asleep. The men brought not one but two animals back down the mountain to feed their family.

Expenses Gas: Bend to Oregon Caves (round-trip) 465 miles @ $4.30/gallon, $79.98 Lunch, en route: $8 Lodging, Oregon Caves Chateau (two nights): $272.70 Dinner, Chateau: $35 Breakfast, Caves Cafe: $13.95 Cave tour: $8.50 Lunch, Caves Cafe: $12.95 Dinner, Chateau: $43 Breakfast, Junction Restaurant: $6.99 TOTAL: $481.07

If you go INFORMATION Photos courtesy Barb Gonzalez

One look at this flowstone formation and it’s clear how the Banana Grove room was given its name. “This is living rock (that) continues to grow and change,” said a park ranger, explaining that the cave was formed by calcite that metamorphosed into marble over 250 million years.

Tours into the caves. I haven’t taken part in this, but I am told the subterranean world takes on a decidedly different perspective when illuminated by small flames rather than artificial lights.

A little history

‘Living rock’ This is the story of Oregon Caves’ discovery as related to me by Derek Neis, a park ranger at Oregon Caves National Monument. Neis has walked through the caverns more than 800 times in the past five years as an interpretive guide, and he no doubt embellishes the story a bit for entertainment value. But the basics are historically documented, and one can only imagine the wonder that accompanies any discovery of terra incognita. Late last month, I joined Neis and a small group of other park visitors on a 90-minute tour of the caves. Although we covered only two-thirds of a mile in our descent to 220 feet below the Earth’s surface, it was a workout: We went up and down 526 steep steps and duck-walked through some passageways with ceilings only 3½ feet high. Neis described the cave as “the geological equivalent of a human being” as he compared its different chambers to a mouth, throat, heart and stomach. It is cool, damp and very dark. And although the chambers are relatively intimate — there are no subterranean cathedrals here — they are stunningly rich in their contents. “This is living rock,” Neis told us. “It continues to grow and change.” Formed of calcite deposited by sea water 250 million years ago, then buried far beneath overlying rock, the calcite metamorphosed into marble — a feature of only about 5 percent of the world’s caves, Neis said. Water filtering from the surface over the past 2½ million years created a carbonic acid that seeps through the rock, dissolving it and creating formations on the ceiling of the cave — stalactites, draperies and flowstone. One chamber, dubbed the Imagination Room, features “moon milk,” a calcite precipitate that doesn’t fully harden but mutates into a variety of odd shapes. (“We call this ‘Cat Stuck in a Drain Pipe,’ ” Neis said as he motioned toward one formation.) Most active in winter, when increased moisture feeds bacteria, moon milk has a texture similar to cottage cheese, our guide said, and it has been used as a healing ointment of similar effectiveness to Neosporin. Every room of Oregon Caves has a different feel from the next, reflecting the complex geology of the Siskiyou Range. There are a few columns and stalagmites rising from the ground, but many more examples of boxwork, soda straws and stalactites, which hold tight to the ceiling. Names of such rooms as Petrified Gardens, Banana Grove and Niagara Falls are representative of their integral features. None is more captivating than Paradise Lost, reached by a staircase whose 45 steps are as steep as a ladder. In this intimate domed room, spectacular flowstone formations look like private boxes in an old-time theater, and drapery surrounds visitors like falling parachutes.

The concentration of parachute-like flowstone formations in the Paradise Lost room are among the most captivating in all of the Oregon Caves. The intimate, domed chamber is reached only by a one-way staircase, its 45 ladder-steep steps intimidating to many visitors.

Unique species It is not only rock that lives within the cave system. Federally preserved as a site of “unusual scientific interest,” the Oregon Caves “have more known endemic species than any other cave west of the Mississippi River,” said George Herring, the park’s chief of interpretation. Those species include 120 creatures, among them harvestmen (“daddy longlegs” spiders), unique translucent insects and eight different bats. The flying mammals are rarely seen by summer visitors (caves are open only from late March to early November), but bats find the grottoes perfect for their winter rest. Among them are Townsend’s big-eared bats and pallid bats that have been recorded to live to 26 years, a remarkable lifespan for these animals. Davidson’s story notwithstanding, no bears have been seen in the caves in recent years. But the skeletal remains of a black bear, dated at about

3,000 years, are displayed in a cavern near the exit tunnel. And the caves have yielded much older bones, including those of a jaguar carbondated at 38,000 years and a grizzly bear of nearly 50,000 years. A consistently humid climate and a constant temperature of about 44 degrees year-round make fossil preservation a sure bet. Helmets and headlamps are unnecessary on the main cave tour, as the concrete path is lit at regular intervals. But an Off-Trail Adventure — offered twice daily Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays in the summer — requires not only those accessories but also gloves, kneepads and elbow pads. Visitors who undertake this three-hour escapade are guaranteed to get dirty as they wriggle through passageways with ceilings as low as 12 inches to reach corners of the cave system inaccessible on the everyday tours. Also in summer, rangers lead nightly Candlelight

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Word of Davidson’s 1874 discovery spread quickly through Southern Oregon. By 1886, two local men had filed a mining claim here, allowing them to begin developing it for tourism. “The development of this park is very much about tourism,” Herring told me. Herring said that conservationist Joaquin Miller, backed by national-forest director Gifford Pinchot, led a movement to protect the caves from vandalism. That was climaxed when President William Howard Taft declared the site a national monument in 1909. Despite their location near the Redwoods-to-Crater Lake tourism corridor, annual visitation stood at only about 1,000 per year until the National Forest Service built a gravel automobile road to the caves, replacing a horse trail, in 1920. Within two years, Model Ts were bringing 20,000 annual visitors to the national monument. The caverns were lit in 1929, just in time for the Great Depression. The economic downturn didn’t stop construction of a six-story hotel. Work began in 1931 on The Chateau at The Oregon Caves National Monument; it was completed three years later with 23 rooms that have since welcomed visitors from around the world. Designed and built by Gust Lium, a Grants Pass architect with no formal training, the rustic Chateau was constructed for a mere $50,000. It spans a wooded ravine beside Cave Creek, which actually runs through its dining room. Stone from the adjacent hillside and Port Orford cedar from surrounding forests went into the construction, notable for its steeply gabled roofs and Swiss chalet flavor. Today it is a designated National Historic Landmark. Continued next page

• Illinois Valley Visitor Center. 201 Caves Highway, Cave Junction; 541-592-2631, www. cavejunction.com • Oregon Caves National Monument. 19000 Caves Highway, Cave Junction; 541592-2100, www.nps.gov/orca

LODGING • The Chateau at The Oregon Caves National Monument. 20000 Caves Highway, Cave Junction; 541-592-3400, 877-245-9022, www. oregoncaveschateau.com. Open May 10 to Oct. 14. Rates from $99 low season, $135 high season. • Kerbyville Inn Bed & Breakfast. 24304 Redwood Highway, Kerbyville; 541-5924689, www.bridgeviewwine.

A party of tourists enters the Oregon Caves to begin a 90-minute tour. com/kerbyvilleinn. Rates from $59. • Vertical Horizons Treehouse Paradise. Mile 2.7 Dick George Road, Takilma; 541-592-4751, http:// treehouseparadise.com. Rates from $270

DINING • Junction Inn Restaurant. 406 S. Redwood Highway, Cave Junction; 541-592-3106. Three meals daily. Budget and moderate. • Taylor’s Sausage. 202 S. Redwood Highway, Cave Junction; 541-592-5358. Three meals daily. Budget and moderate. • Wild River Brewing & Pizza Company. 249 N. Redwood Highway, Cave Junction; 541-592-3556, www. wildriverbrewing.com. Lunch and dinner. Moderate.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

C5

Tacoma’s museum row is a trip into culture, history By Nicole Brodeur The Seattle Times

Photos courtesy Barb Gonzalez

A sea of forested hills greets visitors to a vista point on the Cliff Nature Trail, which extends three-quarters of a mile above the Oregon Caves exit. The view across the Siskiyou Mountains extends to the Illinois Valley and, beyond it, the Kalmiopsis Wilderness of southwestern Oregon.

From previous page

Staying at the Chateau “This is the genuine Oregon experience,” said general manager Menno Kraai. “Once the summer season is here, in July and August, we are sold out.” My overnight stay was very comfortable — made more so, perhaps, by an absence of cellphone or Internet coverage. Guests enter on the fourth floor of the structure, opposite the entrance to the caves. A two-sided marble fireplace graces an expansive lobby where evening wine tastings and occasional poetry readings provide entertainment. A grand staircase climbs to two floors of guest rooms. My corner room was not luxurious by any stretch of the imagination, but its old-fashioned steam heat and other elements harkened to a bygone era. “The style is representative of 1900,” acknowledged Herring, who was trained as a historian. “The Monterey-style furnishings were already old when the Chateau was built.” It may have been a cost-cutting measure, but it works. One level below the lobby, late-’50s rock ’n’ roll entertains diners in the Caves Cafe, where breakfast and lunch are served at a single meandering, W-shaped cedar counter. Nearby, a gift shop sells the work of local artisans. And in the Chateau Dining Room, chef Angelo Coronado and his crew prepare gourmet steakand-seafood dinners at moderate cost. Back in 1938, the Dining Room was the birthplace of the View-Master, a hand-held device that was used to view color slides in three dimensions, and popular through the 1970s. Two photo hobbyists chanced to meet here and spent hours developing the idea. The View-Master was introduced in Portland in 1939, became all the rage after being displayed at the 1940 New York World’s Fair, and within a year was being sold in 1,000 stores. The lower two floors of the Chateau, for those who need to know, are used for maintenance and storage. But they do exit to a lovely trail along Cave Creek.

Miles of hiking In fact, there are plenty of above-ground trails at Oregon Caves National Monument. Among the most accessible is the Cliff Nature Trail, which extends three-quarters of a mile in a loop from the cave exit back to its entrance. (There is also a quarter-mile paved trail descending from the exit.) A highlight is a vista point

The Chateau at The Oregon Caves National Monument opened in 1931 spanning a wooded ravine beside Cave Creek. Now a National Historic Landmark, it was designed and built by Gust Lium, an architect with no formal training, for a mere $50,000.

A blazing fire roars in the two-sided marble fireplace of the Oregon Caves chateau lobby. Wine tastings and occasional poetry readings provide entertainment for overnight visitors, who climb a grand staircase to reach the hotel’s two floors of guest rooms.

A pair of trilliums are typical of spring wildflowers that adorn hillsides of Oregon Caves National Monument. These were found along the Big Tree Loop Trail, a steep, steady path that switches back several times as it climbs to an elevation above 5,000 feet.

that offers a wonderful view across forested hills to the Illinois Valley, and beyond it, the Kalmiopsis Wilderness of southwestern Oregon. In the mood for a hike, I continued from this trail onto the longer and more strenuous Big Tree Trail, which extends 3.3 miles before descending again to the Chateau. The first half is marked by a steep, steady path, switch-

backing several times across the Siskiyou mountain side. Even in late May, patches of snow remained as I climbed to about 5,000 feet. But my rewards were beautiful wildflower photos, a handful of freshly picked morel mushrooms, and a visit to a Douglas fir said to have the largest diameter of its species in Oregon: 13 feet. The trail ended at the Oregon Caves Chalet, where the National Park Service has its offices and from which all cave tours begin. Here I again visited with Herring, who told me that redevelopment of winding state Highway 46 from Cave Junction, and refurbishment of the Chateau itself, are being plotted for the not-too-distant future. That may not take place for several more years. But even as they stand today, Oregon Caves are a far cry from what Elijah Davidson and his buddy, Bruno, discovered in 1874. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

TACOMA, Wash. — This may be the time to stop teasing Tacoma. The longtime home of the paper-mill-made “aroma” has blossomed into Seattle’s cultural cousin to the south, with a museum district that just got a significant boost from the completion of the LeMay-America’s Car Museum (ACM). We thought it might be time to pack a change of clothes and head south for an overnight to take a fresh look around. And as we headed north the next day, we knew: We have to do that again. We started at Hotel Murano, which four years ago was purchased by the Provenance Hotel chain. The former Sheraton is now a sleek, cool museum all its own. From the ceiling of the four-story atrium hang three colored-glass Viking ships by the Danish artist Vibeke Skov. Each floor of the 25-story hotel features a different glass artist, with an exhibit case that welcomes visitors as they step off the elevator. Even better, once you check into the Murano, you don’t need to drive again. Just a 12-minute walk down the hill are the Tacoma Art Museum, the Washington State History Museum, the Children’s Museum of Tacoma and, over a bridge that is a Dale Chihuly exhibit all its own, the Museum of Glass. At the Washington State History Museum, there are still those exhibits that never get old. You can still press a button and see the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse. At another exhibit on the Hanford Nuclear Facility, you can hear a historian describe “Hanford’s legacy of waste,” and a Nez Perce elder talk about how it took away natives’ food, polluted the air and contaminated groundwater. The History Museum is now featuring a well-timed exhibit called “Hope in Hard Times: Washington During the Great Depression,” which runs through Nov. 4. There is a series of photographs from the Works Progress Administration, which kept people working; and about 100 sketches

by Ronald Debs Ginther, who chronicled Depression life while living and struggling in Seattle. The museum asks visitors to share their memories of the Depression on slips of paper posted on a board. A man named Allan wrote that his mother, born in 1924, collected Styrofoam “because they had nothing.” “I do that now!” someone scribbled on the bottom of the note. The Tacoma Art Museum is celebrating the opening of the Chihuly museum at Seattle Center by highlighting its 38piece, permanent exhibit. But the museum is also keeping incredible company these days with “Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture.” The exhibit, which runs through June 10, is its only West Coast stop. Here, you can see works by renowned artists “in a context that emphasizes the importance of gay and lesbian identity, sexuality, AIDS, and of gender difference in shaping modern American portraiture.” In just a few rooms, you can take in an oil painting by Georgia O’Keeffe, photographs by Carl Van Vechten, Walker Evans and Thomas Eakins; selfportraits by photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, and painter

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Romaine Brooks. There are works by John Singer Sargent, J.C. Leyendecker, Keith Haring, Annie Leibovitz and Jasper Johns. All gathered from museums and collections all over the world. Get there. Cross the Chihuly Bridge of Glass to the Museum of Glass, and see the beauty that can be made from “slumped glass.” Right now, the museum is featuring “Scapes,” the work of Laura de Santillana and her brother, Alessandro Diaz de Santillana. The four-room exhibit is set up along the Hindu belief that the universe is divided into separate spheres of existence: Earth, Space, Sun, and Moon and Constellations. Glass is blown and slumped over plywood in layer upon layer, then trimmed in gold guild. To gaze at these pieces is to fall into the sea, or the night sky — and everything in between. The museum’s Hot Shop is a chance to see how glass artists are also daredevils, creating with a 2,300-degree “gloryhole” that opens like the glowing maw of Hades.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

M A

Milestones guidelines and forms are available at The Bulletin, or send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Milestones, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. To ensure timely publication, The Bulletin requests that notice forms and photos be submitted within one month of the celebration.

Ideas for what to wear to a wedding By Janet Bennett Kelly The Washington Post

Jerry and Linda (Geer) Gardner.

Gardner Jerry and Linda (Geer) Gardner, of Bend, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with a trip to the Oregon Coast and are planning a family cruise to Alaska later in the year. The couple were married June 9, 1962, at the Lutheran Church of the Resurrection in Canoga Park, Calif. They have

two children, Kathy Gardner Hollister and Cindy (and Rod) Martino, both of Bend; and ten grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner owned and operated gas stations in Central Oregon until their retirement in 1997. They enjoy family cruises and vacations, as well as hunting, fishing and camping. They have lived in Central Oregon for 43 years.

Wedding season is upon us. For guests, finding the frock most fitting for the occasion can be a puzzle. Fortunately, a profusion of dresses in tangerine, turquoise and hot-pink prints paraded down fashion runways for summer 2012, offering a welcome alternative to the still-practical-but-oh-so-predictable black cocktail dress. Here, we’ve imagined three typical summer wedding scenarios — swanky black tie, destination beach bash and low-key backyard ceremony — and what to wear to each.

The beach Aqua, green and gold patterns swirl over Banana Republic’s shiny cotton strapless dress, which is from its new collaboration with designer Trina Turk. Decorate your decolletage with a coordinating Trina Turk citron bubble necklace. If the ceremony is set for the sand, choose a pair of metallic flat sandals. Daytime events call for a wide-brim hat, while a lightweight shrug protects bare shoulders from the evening chill. Blue Pisces Printed Cora dress, $150. Neck-

lace, $69.50. Both available at stores and www.bananarepublic.com. Cole Haan Air Tali sandals, $127.50 at www. amazon.com. Christys’ Surfside sun hat, $46 at Proper Topper, www.propertopper. com.

The backyard Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg may have worn a suit (and loose tie) and bride Priscilla Chan a traditional wedding gown for their own backyard fete, but we’d bet their guests donned attire expected of cool California techies. Channel your own inner hipster with a coral top dress, exposed back zipper and ribbon hem skirt. Add hammered earrings for a glittery accent. For the ceremony, you may be sinking heels into grass, so forgo the stilettos for flats or a wedge sandal, such as leg-lengthening espadrilles.

James and Martha Helen (Long) Davies will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary with a family celebration. The couple were married June 11, 1952, in Hopkinsville, Ky. They have five children, James “Steve” (and Sally), of Seattle, William “Tim”, of Auburn, Wash., David, of Bend, Michael (and Mary) of Warrenton, and Patricia (and John Killoran) of Monmouth; nine grandchildren; and one

great-granchild. Dr. Davies retired in 1997 from practicing medicine. Mrs. Davies is a homemaker. She enjoys Bible study, skiing, art and making jewelry. They both enjoy fishing, skiing, church activities and traveling. They have traveled to Israel and Turkey on archaeological trips, to Congo to help with construction and to Mexico on a volunteer medical trip. They have lived in Central Oregon for 49 years.

When the invitation says “black tie optional,” your hosts won’t balk if you don’t wear an evening dress, but lean toward the more formal option. Keep accessories minimal with this dramatic Halston Heritage navy gown with flowing black cape. Judith Jack’s marcasite and blue topaz earrings add lightness around your face; sparkling sleek sandals with

Deb Lindsey for The Washington Post

A wide-brim hat and sundress are perfect for a beach wedding.

Pinterest: modern wedding planner? By Cara Kelly The Washington Post.

Images of pink flowers are set between shots of layered cakes and breezy white gowns on Maia McDonald’s “Wedding Inspiration” board on Pinterest. Their presence surprised the freelance graphic designer, who is planning her upcoming wedding and originally thought she wanted nothing to do with the girly color. “I started pinning stuff and pink started showing up a lot, and I realized, ‘Oh maybe I do want pink and I was lying to myself.’ ” Those visual cues are a hallmark of the social media website, which allows users to pin images to online bulletin boards. The weddings category is among the most popular on the site, which overall pulled in 17.8 million unique visitors in February – up 52 percent from 11.7 million in January, according to comScore. With legions of brides (and grooms) finding inspiration all on their own, will Pinterest replace the professionals? A concern reverberating through wedding planning circles is that those inspiration boards could diminish interest in their services. But Fabienne Laveau, owner of the planning company Wedding Muse and a speaker on wedding planning with Pinterest, says the fear is largely unwarranted. “I don’t think Pinterest is having this (negative) impact; in fact, I can see more of a case people are looking at all of these things and saying, ‘I

need a wedding planner.’ ” She credits all that pinning with an increased interest in her website and uses it as a tool for marketing her brand. And just as inspiration boards showed McDonald she wasn’t afraid of pink, Laveau has found they can help her decipher exactly what a woman is imagining. “You really get very little info from the brides. A lot of it is really intuition-based,” she says. “I will leave a meeting and just throw some pictures on to a board that I think reflects what I think I heard them say, and it’s really just the best way I have come up with to communicate.” All that sharing can mean exposure for wedding planners and vendors, and traffic for wedding blogs. Style Me Pretty, a luxury wedding site that features real ceremonies, vendors and inspiration, reports a rise in visitors from Pinterest, now its leading source of referral traffic next to Google search. But plenty of pinners with a do-it-yourself mentality aren’t looking for professional help — they’re just looking for the ideas. Newlywed Christine Daigle Weiss used Pinterest and other DIY sites to plan nearly her entire wedding on a strict budget and short timetable. “There were some things that I can’t even imagine paying anyone to do, like a basket of flip flops for guests,” says the Charlotte resident. She also bought unfinished wood from craft stores for signs and old bird cages for

card holders, and she had a friend who knew how to sew a small pillow for the ring bearer – all projects inspired by images she had seen on Pinterest. “If I had no idea to go from, I wouldn’t have anything to make. I think that is the best aspect of Pinterest. There are some things I never even thought of doing.” Though Pinterest can seem like a vast reserve of free information on everything wedding, Laveau doesn’t believe there will be a rush of women constructing their celebrations from start to finish. “I think Martha Stewart and other do-it-yourself sites have been much more responsible for people having the idea that DIY is easy.” Katie Martin, chief executive of Elegance & Simplicity, Inc. and editor-in-chief of EcoBeautiful Weddings, is similarly skeptical of DIY projects that dominate Pinterest feeds. “I’m not a big fan because I think people get the misconception that they are going to save money,” she says. “You can end up buying all kinds of gadgets. It’s very rare that I repin them.” Martin makes a point of pinning things she likes and believes are valuable ideas, in addition to photos from nuptials her company has designed. The inventive ways that brides and planners alike have begun using the Web site is only the beginning, she says. “I think we’ve only scratched the surface of Pinterest.”

Deb Lindsey for The Washington Post

rows of crystals and an ankle strap accent a shapely leg meant to be seen through a revealing high slit. If a chill sets in from the air conditioning, keep a metallic wrap at the ready.

Dress, $125 rental fee at www.renttherunway.com. Earrings, $150 at www.amazon.com. Glint Milly sandal, $65.90 at www.nordstrom. com. Satin gray wrap, $195 at www.simplysoles.com.

The formal affair

Martha Helen (Long) and Jim Davies.

Davies

Halston Heritage gown, Judith Jack earrings and Glint Milly sandals would be a great choice for a formal wedding.

MILESTONES GUIDELINES If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers:

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Entry fees jump to new heights By Hugo Martin Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Alhambra, Calif., secretary Laurie Casado struggles each year to buy Disneyland annual passes for herself and her family, so the park’s recent announcement that it was jacking up prices by up to 30 percent wasn’t exactly good news. But Casado will buy the passes anyway and cut out something else. “I’ll keep going because Disney is a big part of our lives,” said Casado, who buys annual passes for her husband, daughter and two grandsons, ages 4 and 5. “But the price increase is so disheartening.” Disheartening, perhaps, but inevitable, industry experts say. Disneyland and other theme

CRAFT Continued from C1 a chance at a new life with someone who cares.” But Baker said many seniors may not want to adopt a cat because they’re afraid it might outlive them, and they don’t want to force someone to take care of it after they die. Seniors also may not want to adopt a kitten because they don’t have the energy to raise one, she said. With these concerns in mind, Baker started CRAFT’s senior cat adoption program in 2008. Under this program, the shelter waives the adoption fee for any senior citizen, veteran or person with a disability who takes in a cat that’s at least 1 year old. The foster care team also agrees to take the animal back if its owner reaches the point where he or she can no longer care for it — regardless of the length of the adoption or the reason its owner has for giving it back — as it does with any other animal it adopts out to people in the community. Last year, CRAFT matched 73 adult cats with seniors through its program and an-

park operators have learned that they can raise prices without denting attendance. This year, modest improvements in the economy and a major new attraction at Disney’s California Adventure has apparently emboldened park operators to boost prices a bit more than usual, according to John Gerner, a theme park consultant and managing director for Leisure Business Advisors. “Now that the economy has improved, that in itself justifies increasing prices,” Gerner said. Disney officials declined to explain their reasons behind the latest hike, except to say in an email, “we periodically evaluate and adjust our pricing structure to ensure we are offering a great entertainment value.”

This year, daily passes for the Anaheim Disney parks — Disneyland and Disney California Adventure Park — rose as of May 20 from $80 to $87. The biggest increase hit the estimated 300,000 park-goers, such as Casado, who buy premium annual passes that include parking. Those went from $499 to $649. The jump last year was lower — Disney raised the daily pass by $4 and increased the price of the premium annual pass by $40. The last time prices rose so much was in 2005, shortly before the park unveiled an array of new shows and attractions to celebrate its 50th anniversary. At that time, daily ticket prices for Disneyland jumped almost 13 percent — from $49.75 to $56.

other 14 adult cats with veterans and people with disabilities. Baker said the number of cats her organization places through this program equals 8 to 10 percent of its adoptions each year. “This is a win-win for both the adopter and the cat,” she said.

So far Pete, who was adopted to replace a cat Crawford had for 24 years, has been doing well in his new home and seems to be getting along nicely with Crawford’s other cat, a 4-year-old Siamese named Fluff. Andrew is also doing pretty well, even if he’s not with Boyle any more. Earlier this year, Boyle made the transition from her apartment in northwest Bend to a low-income housing complex that specializes in serving seniors and people with disabilities. She wasn’t sure this complex would allow her to keep Andrew, so she found him a home with one of her friends. When Boyle learned the apartment complex did allow its residents to keep their pets, she called her friend to see if she could get Andrew back, but Andrew and his new owner had bonded. Now, Boyle has a new cat, which she received from a friend who could no longer care for it. “She was going to take it to CRAFT,” Boyle said of the cat, which she’s had since Wednesday. “But I intercepted her.”

The cats Many of the cats adopted out through the senior cat program are older, shy, and may not be suitable for a busy household. They may also have some type of a special circumstance where they need more care than younger animals. This was the case with Pickle Pete, a 1½-year-old cat who only had four teeth and had been at CRAFT’s shelter for several months before Chris Crawford, 52, stopped by and adopted him through the senior program two months ago. “I walked in there and I said, ‘Which one needs a home the most?’ ” said Crawford, who qualifies for the program because CRAFT uses the AARP’s definition of a senior, which applies to anyone 50 or older.

SUDOKU

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JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C8

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LOS ANGELES TIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

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C8

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Hiking the Grand Canyon rim to rim By Chris Walker

Chris Walker, left, and Kevin Horan look over the Grand Canyon from Powell Plateau in October 2011.

Ch icago Tribune

GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK — The Grand Canyon’s beauty beckons like gravity, pulling even the timid to the chasm’s edge. But for those committing to the challenge of a cross-canyon hike, there awaits below the rim a reward beyond the spectacular scenery: time travel. Those horizontal stripes on the postcard panoramas trace a billion years of geological history. They are the sediment and fossils of ancient oceans. According to author Scott Thybony, who literally wrote the books on canyon trails, to hike the canyon is to go back an average of 100,000 years with each downward step. As the trail winds and sometimes plummets through layers of hermit shale, redwall limestone and Tapeats sandstone, the canyon deepens and the climate warms. The hiker sheds his outer layers, and even some layers within, when the cell signal is gone, the world is quiet and the mind centers on the simple: food, water and the next footstep. “There’s something special about being in the canyon,” said Mark Wunner, supervisor at the park’s Backcountry Information Center. “I get excited just thinking about it.” Our party of four wanted just that kind primal peace, and we were willing to burn a lot of cash and fossil fuel in the pursuit. We planned our trip for early October of last year on the historic North and South Bass Trails, which start at the north and south rims and meet at the Colorado River. But we wanted to cross the 18-mile-wide canyon without having to backtrack to a car. “The point,” explained fellow hiker Byron Moffett, of Langley, Wash., “is to see all the trails without having to repeat them.” The solution was to break into pairs in different vehicles, each driving an SUV to a trail head. The North Bass party (Kevin Horan, of Langley, and me, from Evanston, Ill.) and

Photos by Chris Walker Chicago Tribune

A National Park Service ranger rows backpacker Kevin Horan, rear right, and fellow hiker and Tribune photographer Chris Walker (not visible), in October 2011, across the Colorado River as the two “hitch-hike” a ride during their rim-to-rim trek.

the South Bass party (Moffett and Scott Mcneil, also of Langley) would hike down, meet at the river, exchange car keys and hike up the other side to the vehicle left by the other party. Simple. Except for one thing. How does one cross a fast-moving, cold river? “The safe way is to hitchhike,” Wunner advised. “You

Artifacts from the early 1900s remain under a rock canopy at Shinumo Camp on Shinumo Creek in the Grand Canyon.

SOLUTION TO TODAY’S SUDOKU

ANSWER TO TODAY’S JUMBLE

SUDOKU IS ON C7

JUMBLE IS ON C7

ANSWER TO TODAY’S LAT CROSSWORD

CROSSWORD IS ON C7

wait for a ride (from rafters), and jump up and down when you see somebody coming. It’s not something that’s written about in the guide books.” OK, we thought. We’ll try that. The Bass Trails are steep, difficult and suitable only for experienced backpackers. “You’re in

a real inhospitable place that can hurt you,” Moffett said. “You really have to be aware and have some map skills.” There are no trail markers, except at the trail heads. And those border on rude: “Do not expect to be rescued,” they warn. But the Bass Trails are worth the trouble. Built in the late 19th century by their namesake, prospector and tour guide William Bass, the trails are far removed from the more populated corridor routes. That, and a strict permit system, ensure what Wunner calls a “high-quality visitor’s experience.” The North Bass Trail is longer and steeper but more verdant and with more accessible water. A two-day side trip to the Powell Plateau, an “island plateau” forest of high-country ponderosa pines, brings more adventurous backpackers to Dutton Point, with canyon views to test the acrophobic. Five thousand feet below is the archaeological site at

Shinumo Camp, where artifacts remain from old man Bass’ time along the clear and frigid Shinumo Creek. It’s where our hiking parties met for the key exchange, a mere ritual because we carried duplicates, but it was a good excuse to break out the whiskey. Earlier, the south party pals had been ferried across the river by rafters after only a four-hour wait. Two days later our north party crossed with gracious Grand Canyon Association rafters. The drier South Bass Trail offered overnight side trips onto terraces of different elevations and environments. Below the Redwall cliffs, the Tonto Trail leads east above the river through vast gardens of low desert scrub to Serpentine Canyon, with 2-inch thorns threatening your ankles with each step. Camping under a full moon, we were visited by a bighorn sheep. The entire hike could be done in five or six days, but

If you go Backpacking on the noncorridor trails of the canyon demands experience, stamina and routefinding skills. There are no trail markers on the North and South Bass Trails, no campfires, and water is scarce. Hiking in spring and fall will help avoid the canyon’s notorious heat. Required permits become available four months before your desired month, so plan to apply beginning June 1 for an October trip or Dec. 1 for an April trip. They can only be mailed or faxed. Permits are limited and go quickly. Both trail heads for the Bass Trails are remote and require four-wheel drive vehicles. The North Bass trail head is on the North Rim at Swamp Point. A North Kaibab National Forest map is needed. The South Bass trail head is about 30 miles northwest of Grand Canyon Village. Use a map of the Tusayan Ranger District of the Kaibab National Forest. There is no water available at the trail heads, so drive it in. Information on Grand Canyon National Park: nps. gov/grca The Backcountry Information Center, permits and advice: 928-638-7875, nps.gov/grca/planyourvisit/ backcountry.htm The Grand Canyon Association, for books and advice: grandcanyon.org

our trip of nine days made the pace easier and allowed for those side trips. As Moffett said, “It takes thousands of years for something to happen there, so you have to slow down and appreciate it.”


SPORTS

Scoreboard, D2 NBA, D3 NHL, D3

Boxing, D3 MLB, D4 Golf, D5

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Duck women finish second DES MOINES, Iowa — Bolstered by a scintillating victory in the 1,600-meter relay, the University of Oregon women’s track and field team scored the most points ever in an NCAA meet by a Duck squad. But in the end, Louisiana State came up with more in the final day of the NCAA Track and Field Championships Saturday at Drake Stadium. The top-ranked Tigers had a nearly flawless meet to win the 2012 national title with 76 points. Oregon was the runner-up for the fourth straight year, scoring 62 points. That was the most the Ducks have ever totaled under the current scoring format that dates to the mid-1980s. The Ducks arrived at their final score thanks to a commanding performance in the 1,600-meter relay. The team of English Gardner, Chizoba Okodogbe, Laura Roesler and Phyllis Francis won in a meet-record 3:24.54. The Ducks’ time was also a Pac-12 record and the second-fastest time in collegiate history. Oregon’s Jordan Hasay finished third (4:14.03) in the women’s 1,500 meters. The Duck men, who did not have any entries on Saturday, finished tied for ninth with Texas with 22 points. Florida won the men’s team title with 50 points, followed by LSU with 48.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

NBA FINALS SET

COLLEGE BASEBALL

COLLEGE TRACK & FIELD

D

Motor sports, D5 Tennis, D6 Horse racing, D6

Miami’s LeBron James smiles during the trophy presentation following the Heat’s victory over the Boston Celtics Saturday in Miami. The Heat will face Oklahoma City in the NBA Finals. Related story, D3.

Oregon rally falls short as Kent State takes opener The Associated Press EUGENE — Jimmy Rider set a school record with his 100th hit of the season and drove in two runs as Kent State extended its winning streak to 21 games with a 7-6 victory over Oregon to open their NCAA super regional series on Saturday night. Left-hander David Starn scattered four runs and five hits over 6 1⁄3 innings for the Golden Flashes (45-17), who are making their first-ever appearance in a super regional. Oregon, the No. 5 national seed, rallied with two runs in the bottom of the ninth but couldn’t overcome earlier mistakes. Senior Alex Keudell

allowed two earned runs and nine hits over 7 1⁄3 innings for the Ducks (45-18). The winner of the best-of-three series advances to the College World Series starting Friday in Omaha, Neb. Oregon is making its second trip to the postseason since it reinstated baseball in 2009. The Ducks advanced out of their double-elimination regional for the first time since 1954, when the team made its lone trip to the College World Series. Game 2 is set for today at 7 p.m. at PK Park in Eugene. If necessary, Game 3 would take place at 4 p.m. on Monday, also in Eugene.

Lynne Sladky / The Associated Press

COMMENTARY SISTERS RODEO

Avoiding distraction a key part of golf W

atching a professional golfer flip out over the slightest distraction must look pretty funny to those unmoved by the sport. After all, most recreational golfers could make their routine putting stroke with an F-16 crackling overhead. Yet reportedly Phil Mickelson was so upset over cell phones in the crowd at The Memorial last week that he sent a text message to PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem to complain — from the sixth fairway. A colleague of mine was recently poking fun at golfers reacting to what most would consider at worst relatively

—From wire reports

ZACK HALL mild annoyances. Suddenly I was in a defensive position so familiar to any golf fan who consorts with those uninitiated to the sport. Are pro golfers just temperamental whiners? That, of course, was my colleague’s contention. (Turnabout is fair play as I often make fun of her favorite sports, too.) In reality, it’s just that highlevel golfers play a game in which a lost stroke can make all the difference. See Distraction / D5

RUNNING

Strong pitching leads Elks to win

Winners crowned at area marathon Runners who live on opposite sides of the country were the winners of the Three Sisters Marathon, staged Saturday in Redmond. Bend resident Rob Hendrickson won the 26.2-mile race, which started and finished at Eagle Crest Resort, in 3 hours, 4 minutes, 42 seconds. Rachel Ackerman, of Washington, D.C., was the first female finisher and ninth overall in 3:31:28. A total of 52 participants completed the race. In the event’s 5-kilometer run/walk, Bend’s Jason Townsend won in 18:57, while Jennifer Humphrey, of Camas, Wash., was the first woman and sixth overall in 26:05. The quintet of Brad Bailey, Justin Norris, Brian O’Sullivan, Rigoberto Ramirez and Randy Stutzman was first in the five-person relay in 3:28:36, and Jen Roberts and Mark Roberts were first in the two-person marathon relay in 3:32:40. (Hometowns for the relay winners were unavailable.) For complete results from the Three Sisters Marathon, see Scoreboard, D2. —Bulletin staff report

CORRECTION The Bend Elks preview that ran Friday in The Bulletin around Page E1 contained incorrect information. Infielder Grant Newton and pitcher Kyle Doyle play college baseball at Seattle University. The Bulletin regrets the error.

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Steer wrestler Christian Radabaugh takes a break from rodeo action while at the Crook County Fairgrounds in Prineville on Thursday. Radabaugh needs to win $89 at today’s Sisters Rodeo to earn his PRCA card and become an official professional.

I wanna be a cowboy • A Crook County graduate hopes to earn his PRCA card in today’s final performance of the Sisters Rodeo

Bulletin staff report Starting pitcher Travis Radke struck out eight batters and gave up just two hits in five innings to lead the Bend Elks to a 3-1 victory over Klamath Falls in a West Coast League baseball game Saturday night at Bend’s Vince Genna Stadium. Radke, of the University of Portland, gave up no runs and walked just two batters. First baseman Bo Walter, of the College of San Mateo (Calif.), was three for four at the plate with two RBIs to help the Elks earn their second straight win over the Gems. Bend defeated Klamath Falls 6-3 in the

WCL BASEBALL Elks’ home opener Friday night. Walter, who is batting .455 in six games, had three of the Elks five hits Saturday night. His two-run single in the bottom of the sixth inning gave Bend a 3-0 lead. Bend, which improved to 4-2 with the victory, will host Walla Walla today at 5:05 p.m. at Genna Stadium in the first contest of a threegame homestand against the Sweets. The Elks play at 12:05 p.m. on Monday and 6:35 p.m. on Tuesday.

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For Central Oregon steer wrestler Christian Radabaugh, earning a paycheck today during the final performance of the Sisters Rodeo is about more than just the money. Radabaugh, 21 and a 2009 Crook County High School graduate, is on the cusp of becoming a cardcarrying member of the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association. A senior-to-be at UNLV, he is just $89 short of the $1,000 in prize winnings he needs to earn his PRCA card, the signature of a pro rodeo cowboy. “You just have to keep chugging away at it,” Radabaugh says about earning the card. The former Crook County linebacker looks to build on the success he achieved earlier in the rodeo season. See Cowboy / D6

Sisters Rodeo final performance When: Today, 1 p.m. Where: Sisters Rodeo Grounds Cost: Tickets start at $12. Infants must have a ticket. Web: www.sistersrodeo.com

Inside • Results from Friday night and Saturday afternoon performances of the Sisters Rodeo, See Scoreboard, D2

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D2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

SCOREBOARD RODEO Local Sisters Rodeo Friday night and Saturday afternoon results ——— Team bronc riding — 1, Robert Spino, Warm Springs; 2, Mike Boyle, Klamath Falls; 3, Casey Heemsah, Toppenish, Wash. Tie-down roping — 1, Tuf Cooper, Decatur, Texas, 8.7 seconds; 2, Blair Burk, Durant, Okla., 9.4; 3, Clint Robinson, 9.6; 4, Ryle Smith, Oakdale, Calif., 0.7; 5, Trevor Knowles, Mount Vernon, 10.4; 6, Seth Hopper, Stanfield, 10.5 Bareback —1, Brian Bain, Culver, 86; 2, Steven Peebles, Redmond, 82; 3, Orlun McGuffin, Ellensburg, Wash., 80; 4, Seth Hardwick, Laramie, Wyo., 77; 4, George Gillespie IV, Placerville, Calif., 77; 6, Austin Foss, Terrebonne, 76. Steer wrestling — 1, Coleman Kohort, Okotoks, Alberta, 4.4 seconds; 2, Miles Mark Switzer, Morrow Bay, Calif., 4.7; 3, Sean Santucci, Prineville, 4.9; 4, Alex Robertson, Bend, 5.0; 5, Riley York, Loyalton, Calif., 5.2; 5, Trevor Knowles, Mount Vernon, 5.2; 7, Wyatt Smith, Rexburg, Idaho, 5.4. Saddle bronc — 1, Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah, 82; 1, Sterling Crawley, College Station, Texas, 82; 3, Joaquin Real, Woody, Calif., 78; 4, Ben Londo, Pendleton, 77; 5, Jess Williams, Paso Robles, Calif., 76; 5, Clarence Brian Gilham, Browning, Mont., 76; 7, Cooper DeWitt, Rio Rico, Ariz., 69; 7, Max Filippini, Battle Mountain, Nev., 69. Team roping — 1, Turtle Powell, Stephensville, Texas, and Dugan Kelly, Paso Robles, Calif., 5.7 seconds; 2, Brooks Dahozy, Window Rock, Ariz., and B.J. Campbell, 5.8; 3, Shane Erickson, Terrebonne, and Brent Falon, Yakima, Wash., 5.9; 4, Tyler Shannon, Caldwell, Idaho, and Todd Cleveland, Lewiston, Idaho, 6.4; 5, Jack Fischer, Ellensburg, Wash., and Ryan Powell, Caldwell, Idaho, 7.8; 6, Keven Daniel, Franklin, Tenn., and Chase Tryan, Helena, Mont., 11.0; 7, Dakota Eldridge, Elko, Nev., and Andy Carlson, Echo, 16.6; 8, Brad Goodrich, Stanfield, and Trevor Knowles, Mount Vernon, 18.4; 9, David Key, Stephenville, Texas, and Rich Skelton, Llano, Texas, 20.5. Barrel racing — 1, Brenda Mays, Terrebonne, 17.61; 1, Danna Stovner, Council, Idaho, 17.61; 3, Jacki Gudmundson, Monroe, Wash., 17.62; 4, Jody Hale, Echo, 17.63; 5, Nicole Yost, Hico, Texas, 17.71; 6, Brittany Kelly, Paso Robles, Calif., 17.72; 7, Deanne Bain, Culver, 17.76; 7, Viki Friedrich, Salkum, Wash., 17.76; 9, Gaylene Buff, Westwald, British Columbia, 17.85; 10, Kym LaRoche, Arlington, Wash., 17.91; 11, Jillian Connolly, Odessa, Wash., 17.94 Bull riding — 1, Colin McTaggart, Las Vegas, Nev., 88; 2, Nevada Newman, Melstone, Mont., 86; 2, Kaycee Rose, Clovis, Calif., 86; 2, Keith Roquemore, Cottonwood, Calif., 86; Justin Rickard, Nuevo, Calif., 86; 6, Blaine Skaggs, Hubbard; 6, Nile Lebaron, Hamilton, Texas, 83; 8, Seth Glause, Cheyenne, Wyo., 81.

RUNNING Local Three Sisters Marathon Redmond Saturday ——— Marathon (Place, name, hometown, time) 1, Rob Hendrickson, Bend, 3:04:42 7:03. 2, Jeremiah Bartz, Eugene, 3:05:35. 3, Duane Pedersen, Eugene, 3:13:21. 4, David Skillman, Washington, D.C., 3:18:40. 5, Tim Swietlik, Vancouver, Wash., 3:20:47. 6, Chris Baker, Coeur D Alene, Idaho, 3:22:07. 7, Michael Harold, Washington, D.C., 3:25:31. 8, Adam Meyer, Washington, D.C., 3:26:23. 9, Rachel Ackerman, Washington, D.C., 3:31:28. 10, Travis Green, New York N.Y., 3:37:52. 11, Erika Glick, Klamath Falls, 3:42:42. 12, Moises Lucero, Eugene, 3:43:30. 13, Tyler Frisbee, Washington, D.C., 3:43:43. 14, Bruce Svoboda, Glen Ellyn, Ill., 3:45:26. 15, Matt Azevedo, Salem, 3:46:23 8:39. 16, Daniel Johnson, Redmond, 3:55:24 9:00. 17, Duncan Bauerlein, Portland, 3:55:25. 18, Derek Palmer, Redmond, 3:55:47 9:00. 19, Jeff Haak, Portland, 3:56:13. 20, Britain Redline, Portland, 3:56:18. 21, Sean Rodgers, Sweet Home, 3:59:33. 22, Lori Ozment, Champaign, Ill., 4:12:44. 23, Steve Tredway, Manteca, Calif., 4:15:29. 24, Joe Terleski, Salem, 4:19:00. 25, Noelle Newman, Carmel, Calif., 4:19:08. 26, Dana Brash, Monroe, Wash., 4:22:33. 27, Stuart White, Portland, 4:22:51. 28, Jose Bustillos, Oretech, 4:24:49. 29, Ryan Weider, Oretech, 4:25:41. 30, Char Sundstrom, Black Butte Ranch, 4:26:10. 31, Jeremiah Toews, Portland, 4:28:43. 32, Erik Opsahl, Auburn, Wash., 4:31:39. 33, Susan Staley, Marion, Va., 4:37:17. 34, Steven Larson, Sacramento, Calif., 4:38:11. 35, Sarah Larson, Washington, D.C., 4:38:12. 36, Beth Agnew, Redmond, 4:38:31. 37, Mark Wright, Corvallis, 4:39:10. 38, Julia Laney, Corvallis, 4:41:23. 39, Kathy Milligan-Myhre, Eugene, 4:41:33. 40, Chris Kienzle, Powell Butte, 5:20:26. 41, Jonathan Starr, Bend, 5:23:56. 42, Erika Mittge, Eugene, 5:25:28. 43, Joye McElroy, Sandy Plains, Ga., 5:26:53. 44, Melanie Hampton, Hillsboro, Mo., 5:27:57. 45, Randy Stillman, Boring, 5:35:35. 46, Jeff Uphold, Veneta, 5:54:41. 47, Lola Hagman, Madras, 6:14:34. 48, Han Kleinman, Redmond, 6:19:28. 49, Lisa Kleinman, Portland, 6:19:28. 50, Stephen Hamilton, Sunriver, 6:24:18. 51, Charlie Carlin, Atlantic Beach, Fla., 6:27:34. 52, Susan Carlin, Atlantic Beach, Fla., 6:27:35. 5K (Place, name, hometown, time) 1, Jason Townsend, Bend, 18:57. 2, Fisher Bien, Bend, 22:07. 3, Rod Bien, Bend, 22:08. 4, Patrick Humphrey, Camas, Wash., 24:56. 5, James Manley, Redmond, 25:37. 6, Jennifer Humphrey, Camas, Wash., 26:05. 7, Erika Strauser, Bend, 26:27. 8, Doug Bordan, Bend, 26:29. 9, Allen Reel, Beaverton, 26:39. 10, Evan Kennedy, Bend, 27:35. 11, Lynne Roy, Redmond, 28:16. 12, Georgann Reel, Beaverton, 29:06. 13, Jesse Wallace, Bend, 29:53. 14, Jacob Singer-Beilin, Phoenix, 30:54. 15, Ashley Martin, Prineville, 31:04. 16, Zachary Gault, Redmond, 32:57. 17, Jennifer Barnes, Portland, 33:00. 18, Janine Toomey, Portland, 33:42. 19, Lane Fletcher, Oregon City, 34:54. 20, Caitlin Kennedy, Bend, 35:42. 21, Katie Rarick, Yucca Valley, Calif., 36:12. 22, Violeta Karr, Redmond, 36:19. 23, Mindy Lyman, Bend, 36:31. 24, Randee Anshutz, Bend, 36:31. 25, Kate Hagerty, Crooked River, 36:56. 26, Sue Hagerty, Crooked River, 36:57. 27, Elaine Ellsworth, Bend, 37:54. 28, Elizabeth Fleenor, Redmond, 39:23. 29, Lynn Fleenor, Redmond, 39:31. 30, Makenzie Wheeler/Manely, Redmond, 39:40. 31, Lessley Sartell, Prineville, 43:05. 32, Laurie Coleman, Portland, 44:32. 33, Helen White, Portland, 45:33. 34, Richard Carlson, Crescent, 45:47. 35, Barb Stillman, Boring, 45:51. 36, Aerin Yates, Sandy, 46:37. 37, Mary Yates, Sandy, 46:37. 38, Carolyn Houghton, Redmond, 47:11. 39, Pam Bowersox, Tigard, 48:11. 40, Kandi Marks, Troutdale, 48:13. 41, Stevi Marks, Troutdale, 48:16. 42, Piper Marks, Troutdale, 48:17. 43, Kensey Gault, Redmond, 50:18. 44, Michael Mulligan, Redmond, 50:24. 45, Denise Opsahl, Auburn, Wash., 52:07. 46, Denise Opsahl, Camp Sherman, 52:07 16:47. 47, Aly Alcorn, Winston Salem, N.C., 52:58 17:03. 48, Sally Carlson, Crescent, 52:58 17:03. 49, Amy Ward, Bend, 52:59. Marathon: Two-person relay (Place, team name, team members, time) 1, Team Roberts: Jen and Mark Roberts, 3:32:40. 2, Running for a Bottle: Cheryl Cox and Jennifer Myers, 3:55:26. 3, Brenda’s Sisters: Karen and Valerie Wolfe, 3:57:19. 4, Carr Girlz: Jennifer Miller and Jocelyn Sherrick, 4:15:21. 5, Soul Sisters!: Sara Bain and James Koski, 4:22:28. 6, Ducks: Don Bain and Lee Johnson, 4:22:28. Marathon: Five-person relay (Place, team name, team members, time) 1, Some Trashy Guys: Brad Bailey, Justin Norris, Brian O’Sullivan, Rigoberto Ramirez, Randy Stutzman, 3:28:36. 2, Oak Creek Refugees: John Pearson, Keut Pearson, Diane Yensen, Kermit Yensen, Zac Yensen, 3:41:35. 3, Fabulous Fast Five: Adnenne Chaney, Annie Gayvert, Erica Ibsen, Cassie Jarvie, Taylor Williams, 3:41:37. 4, Snappy Girls: Marni Hanna, Stephanie Hicks, Stephanie Weritz, Amy Wheary, Sarah Wuepper, 3:41:53. 5, Wasted Potential: Christi Barnes, Ami Garibay, Nathan Garibay, Jason Gault, Krista Gault, 3:44:14. 6, Redmond Veterinary Clinic: Jennifer Butler, Hunter Clark, Shwn Clark, Ross Huckfeldt, Cassee Terry, 3:51:28. 7, 2 Chicks and a Hick: Beau Blackburn, Curt Blackburn, Garrett Blackburn, Kaeko Blackburn, Susie Hueckman, 3:53:39. 8, Average Joe’s: Dawn Gunnels, Will Gunnels, Cyndi Lehnertz, T.J. Lehnertz, Tyler Lehnert, 3:54:58. 9, Powered By Isagenix: Sheri McAlister, Bre West, Dedee West, Sue West, Tony West, 4:50:27. 10, Untethered Soles: Jill Bolm, Lynette Hawkins, Linda Sullivan, Trinette Warren, Holly Werner, 5:16:40. 11, Road Rivals: Marita Cox, Carla Ferland, Erin Henkelman, Shelea Mollerstuen, Lynette Pagano, 5:34:17.

BASEBALL WCL WEST COAST LEAGUE

——— League standings East Division Wenatchee AppleSox Bellingham Bells Walla Walla Sweets Kelowna Falcons West Division Bend Elks Corvallis Knights Kitsap BlueJackets Cowlitz Black Bears Klamath Falls Gems Saturday’s Games Bend 3, Klamath Falls 1 Bellingham 3, Kitsap 2 Wenatchee 1, Corvallis 0 Today’s Games Walla Walla at Bend, 5:05 p.m. Kitsap at Kelowna, 6:05 p.m. Klamath at Bellingham, 6:05 p.m. Corvallis at Wenatchee, 6:05 p.m.

W 6 5 3 0

L 2 2 3 2

W 4 4 4 2 0

L 2 3 5 3 6

Saturday’s Summary

Elks 3, Gems 1 Klamath Falls 000 000 001 — 1 7 2 Bend 000 102 00X — 3 5 1 Burright, Emerson (7) and Cornish. Radke, Peterson (6), Grazzini (8) and Guinn. W — Radke. L — Burright. 2B — Klamath Falls: George. Bend: Clark.

College NCAA Division I Super Regionals All Times PDT Double Elimination x-if necessary ——— At Alex Box Stadium Baton Rouge, La. Saturday, June 9, LSU 5, Stony Brook 4, 12 innings, (completion of Friday’s Game) Saturday, June 9, Stony Brook 3, LSU 1 Today, June 10, Stony Brook at LSU, 10 a.m. At Hi Corbett Field Tucson, Ariz. Friday, June 8, Arizona 7, St. John’s 6, 10 innings Saturday, June 9, Arizona 7, St. John’s 4, Arizona wins series At Dick Howser Stadium Tallahassee, Fla. Friday, June 8, Florida State 17, Stanford 1 Saturday, June 9, Stanford at Florida State, ppd., rain Today, June 10, Stanford at Florida State, 4 p.m. x-Monday, June 11, Stanford at Florida State, TBA. At Jackie Robinson Stadium Los Angeles Friday, June 8, UCLA 6, TCU 2 Saturday, June 9, UCLA 4, TCU 1, UCLA wins series At Alfred A. McKethan Stadium Gainesville, Fla. Saturday, June 9, Florida 7, N.C. State 1 Today, June 10, N.C. State at Florida, 10 a.m. x-Monday, June 11, N.C. State at Florida, 10 a.m. At Baylor Ballpark Waco, Texas Saturday, June 9, Baylor 8, Arkansas 1 Today, June 10, Arkansas at Baylor, 1 p.m. x-Monday, June 11, Arkansas at Baylor, 1 p.m. At Carolina Stadium Columbia, S.C. Saturday, June 9, South Carolina 5, Oklahoma 0 Today, June 10, Oklahoma at South Carolina, 4 p.m. x-Monday, June 11, Oklahoma at South Carolina, 4 p.m. At PK Park Eugene Saturday, June 9, Kent State 7, Oregon 6 Today, June 10, Kent State at Oregon, 7 p.m. x-Monday, June 11, Kent State at Oregon, 4 p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— Today’s Game Houston at Vancouver, 4 p.m.

GOLF Local Club Results ——— AWBREY GLEN Men’s Guest Day, June 6 Partner’s Better Ball Flight 1 — Dennis Magill/Bill DuBois, 61. 2, Jeff Keller/Bob Stirling, 61. 3, Shelley Grudin/Joe Jezukewicz, 62. Flight 2 — 1, Roy Fullerton/Kiran Rai, 62. 2, Michael Mount/Kent Franklin, 64. 3, Richard Gallio/Ed Shank, 66. KPs — Roy Fullerton, No. 6; Tom Campbell, No. 13. Women’s Sweeps, June 7 Ones 1, Kaye Williams/Molly Mount/Claudia Arthur/ Debra Warren, 59. 2, Louann Thomas/Sally Batchelder/Ardene Fullerton/Chris Larson, 64. Nine-Hole Women’s Sweeps, June 7 Scramble 1, Lorchid Macri/Linda Quattrone/Wendy Lewis/ Patty Stark, 49. BEND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Ladies’ Golf Association Royal Court Mixer, May 30 Two Net Best Balls 1, Debra Smolich/Deborah Cox/Dorothy Stenkamp/Kay Case (blind draw), 127. 2, Barbara Walley/Jane Boubel/Mari Tank/Judy Boulet, 129. 3, Sally Schafroth/Sandy Edwards/Nancy Eldredge/ Julane Dover (blind draw), 132. 4, Jane Lussier/Kay Miller/Mary Ellen Marlatt/Nan Cooley, 133. 5 (tie), Julane Dover/Joanne Christensen/Margaret Martens/ Charlotte Rodgers, 135; Kay Case/Elaine Dehart/Joan Brookhart/Martha Weaver, 135. BROKEN TOP Mens Gathering, June 6 Best Ball Green Flight 1 — Gross: 1, H. Friesen/S. Brown, 70. Net: 1, J. Stack/W. Marsh, 62. Green Flight 2 — Gross: 1, J. Brewer/C. Miller, 75. Net: 1, G. Heck/L. Dougharty, 62. Silver Flight — Gross: 1, T. Cochran/T. Fehrenbacher, 75. Net: 1, L. Blair/S. Lee, 59. CROOKED RIVER RANCH Men’s Golf Club, June 5 Stroke Play A Flight (0-15 handicaps) — Gross: 1, Mac Kilgo, 76. 2 (tie), Tim Johnson, 78; Jim Martin, 78. 4, David Greig, 80. Net: 1, Jay Snavely, 67. 2 (tie), Gary Olds, 69; Ron Garzini, 69; Herb Parker, 69. B Flight (16 and higher) — Gross: 1 (tie), Art Crossley, 87; Vene Dunham, 87; Terry Hunter, 87. 4, Roger Ferguson, 88. Net: 1, Jerry Winheim, 63. 2, Eddie Maroney, 66. 3 (tie), Ted Carlin, Ted, 70; Don Spring, 70. EAGLE CREST Men’s Club, May 30 at Resort Course Scramble 1 (tie), Mark Scott/Mike Narzisi/Jerry Volf/Billy Balding, 56; Steve Peccia/Roger Duby/Larry Clark/ Dick Wald, 56; Roger Palmer/Ray DuPuis/Pat Kenny/ Ned Ongaro, 56. 4, Bob Mowlds/Jerry Decoto/Mac Heitzhausen/Michael Mooberry score: 57. 5 (tie), Ray Schadt/Bill Widmer/Frank Nickel/Bill Houck, 58; Ken Murrill/Mike Reynolds/Alan Falco/Jerry Kelly, 58; Jim Hawkes/Mike Bessonette/Pat Moore/Dan Myers, 58; Roger Edgerly/Joe Kosanovic/Mike Farley/Randy Thomason, 58. Central Oregon Senior Women’s Golf Association, June 5 at Eagle Crest Stroke Play Class A — Gross: 1, Jan Sandburg, Widgi Creek, 83. Net: 1, Vernon Rygh, Eagle Crest, 67. Class B — Gross: 1, Lael Cooksley, Eagle Crest, 91. Net: 1, Jackie Yake, Juniper, 70. Class C — Gross: 1, Carol Ann Still, Juniper, 96. Net: 1 (tie), Julie Glender, Crooked River Ranch, 70; Jan Guettler, Widgi Creek, 70. Class D — Gross: 1, Marilyn Baer, Juniper, 102. Net: 1, Pat Porter, Eagle Crest, 70. KPs — Class A: Carmen West. Class B: Sally Batchelder. Class C: Charlene Kenny. Class D: Rosemary Norton. Accurate Drives — Class A: Linda Hill. Class B: Denise Waddell. Class C: Bev Ramsey. Class D: Jan Bull.

THE GREENS AT REDMOND Ladies of the Greens, June 5 Stroke Play A Flight — Gross: 1, Sharron Rosengarth, 39. 2, Dee Baker, 40. 3, Diane Miyauchi, 41. Net: 1, Beverly Tout, 28. 2, Lois Morris, 33. 3, Kay Webb, 35. B Flight — Gross: 1, Bert Gantenbein, 46. 2, Linda Kanable, 48. 3, Ruth Backup, 49. Net: 1, Lonie Bibler, 33. 2, Norma Carter, 36. 3, Claudia Powell, 38. C Flight — Gross: 1, Ethelmae Hammock, 49. 2, Ruth Chaffey, 50. 3, Betty Hall, 51. Net: 1, Jan Saunders, 33. 2, Claudia Brandow, 34. 3, Karlene Grove, 35. D Flight — Gross: 1, Anita Epstein, 46. 2, Margaret Pickett, 54. 3, Myrn Grant, 54. Net: 1, Jackie Hester, 32. 2, Jane Schroeder, 33. 3, Laura Pinckney, 35. LDs — Flight A: Diane Miyauchi. Flight B: Linda Kanable. Flight C: Pat Elliott. Flight D: Margaret Pickett. QUAIL RUN Men’s Club, June 6 Stroke Play Flight 1 — Gross: 1, Jim Dexter, 78. Net: 1, Steve Randol, 71. 2, Jeff Scott, 72. Flight 2 — Gross: 1, Rick Bauman, 100. Net: 1, Bob Harriman, 75. 2 (tie), Erv Remmele, 77; Don Bauman, 77. KPs — Matt Koski, No. 8; Jim Ulrey, No. 10. WIDGI CREEK Men’s Club, June 6 Best Ball AB Flight (Blue Tees) — Gross: 1, Bill Burley, 72. Net: 1, Fran Ostlund/Mitch Cloninger, 66. 2, Greg Watt/Andy Knowlton, 67. CD Flight (Blue Tees ) — Gross: 1, Daryl Hjeresen, 77. Net: 1 (tie), Jerry Olsen/John Cosgrave, 62; Ed McKeon, 62. AB Flight (White Tees) — Gross: 1, Jim Bradbury/Ron Stassens, 70. Net: 1, Gary Grimm/Stosh Thompson, 59. 2, Don Kramer/Rich Friscia, 61. 3, Pat Kallal/Ken Schofield, 62. CD Flight (White Tees) — Gross: 1, Herb Blank/Bob Reid, 86. Net: 1, Doug Nelson/Ray Horgen, 62. 2, George Sayre/Peter Gulick, 63. 3, Larry Strunk/Robert Bailey, 64. KPs — Don Kramer, No. 2; John Cosgrave, No. 15. Women’s Club, June 6 Criss Cross First Flight — 1 (tie), Jan Sandburg, 29; Pam Chase, 29; Phyllis Pengelly, 29; Cherie Powell, 29; Nancy Snyder, 29. Second Flight — 1, Chris Fitzgibbons, 25.5. 2 (tie), Virginia Knowles, 27; Patricia Vavrinek, 27. Third Flight — 1, Dottie Groves, 28. 2, Diane Struve, 28.5. 3 (tie), Carole Colby, 30.5; Debra Bergeson, 30.5; Jan Guettler, 30.5. KPs No. 11) — A Flight: Janet Knowlton. B Flight: Virginia Knowles. D Flight: Janice Vanderwall. BROKEN TOP Ladies Spring Fling, June 7 Net Scramble Hyacinths — 1, Robin Bankofier/Judy Heck/Tillie Newgard, 66. 2, Sharon Henderson/Pamela Kast/ Penny Falck/Laura Wilson, 67. 3, June Knowles/Gwen Friesen/Nancy Jean Coe/Audrey Keller, 68. Tulips — 1, Tina Burnside/Sherri Bashore/Judy Scherzer/Beverly Gladder, 66. 2, Barb Werdell/Nina Kehrer/Karen Whittemore, 67. 3, Dianne Newberry/Judy Cochran/Lynne Rosenthal/Pam Williams, 72. Daffodils — 1, Gail Johnson/Brenda O’Shea/Sue Flanagan-Gibson/Marcia Harrison, 70. 2, Phyllis Marr/Judith Bornholdt/Jeanne Berry/Helena Blair, 72. 3, Sandy Dougharty/Irma Robinson/Patty Felton/Janet Pearson, 74. Lilies — 1, Michele Harmount/Dolores Riquelme/ Susan Krantz/Kathy Wilhelm, 63. 2, Jeanne Raudman/ Norma DuBois/Carrie Lee/Corkey Nordstrom, 65. 3, Nancy Ruff/Melissa Strange/Marge Vancamp/Marcia Garon, 66. Closest to the Flower — Sue Flanagan-Gibson, No. 5; Irma Robinson, No. 16. Closest to the Line — 0-28 handicaps: Norma DuBois, No. 14. 29 handicap or higher: Lynne Rosenthal, No. 14. THE GREENS AT REDMOND Men’s Club, June 7 Net Stroke Play Flight A — 1, Bob Grabar, 53. 2, Steve Warwick, 56. 3, Mike Frier, 59. 4 (tie), Marv Bibler, 60; Darwin Thies, 60. Flight B — 1, Pee Wee Blackmore, 55. 2 (tie), Phil Backup, 61; Bob Haak, 61. 4 (tie), Miles Hutchins, 61; Scott McMillin, 61; Hoyt Norris, 61. KPs — Bob Gorden, No. 4; Bob Grabar, No. 7; Darwin Thies, No. 13; Mike Frier, No. 17. Golfers of the Week — Flight A: Steve Warwick. Flight B: Pee Wee Blackmore. JUNIPER Ladies Golf Club, June 6 Two Net Stableford 1, Sue Adams,/Carol Ann Still,/Darla Farstvedt/Carolyn Houghton, 89. 2, Fran Atchison/Doris Thompson/Lois Northrup, 86. 3 (tie), Sandy Cameron/ Karen Wintermyre/Ruby Kraus/Carol Ann Thurston, 84; Linda Wakefield/Debbie Cooper/Pam Hiatt/Marvie Moyer, 84. Birdies — Sandy Cameron, Sue Adams, Ginger Anderlohr. Chip-ins — Darla Farstvedt, Jackie Yake, Fran Atchison, Karen Wintermyre. LDs — Sandy Cameron, Pam Hiatt, Marilyn Baer. KPs — Sue Adams, Fran Atchison, Carolyn Houghton. MEADOW LAKES Ladies of the Lake, May 31 Red, White and Blue Gross: 1, Karen Peterson, 94. Net: 1, Ginny Gibson, 65. 2, Norma McPherren, 76. 3, Jean Gregerson, 77. Senior League, June 5 Scramble Gross: 1 (tie), Nelson Haas/Jim Murphy, 40; John McCulloch/Bob Wolcott, 40; Alan Jones/Buyd Joyce, 40. Net: 1, Cliff Garrett/John Traven, 33. Men’s Association, June 6 Nine-Hole Stroke Play Gross: 1, Jim Montgomery, 36. 2 (tie), Jake Shinkle, 38; Britton Coffer, 38. 4 (tie), Les Bryan, 40; Jeff Storm, 40. Net: 1, Steve Kidder, 33. 2, Fred Bushong, 34. 3, Larry Conklin, 35. 4 (tie), Steve Reynolds, 36; Hank Simmons, 36; Jordie Simmons, 36. 7 (tie), Greg Lambert, 37; Ron Meredith, 37. KPs — A Flight: Ron Meredith, No. 13; Jim Montgomery, No. 17. B Flight: Mike Ball, No. 13; Larry Conklin, No. 17. Ladies of the Lake, June 7 Odd Holes Gross: 1, Diane Hayes, 47. 2 (tie), Patricia McLain, 48; Karen Peterson, 48. Net: 1, Gloria Schwartz, 32.5. 2, Ginny Gibson, 35.5. Central Oregon Golf Tour, June 7 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Tony Battistella, 73. 2, Les bryan, 74. 3 (tie), Jake Shinkle, 75; Jim Montgomery, 75. Net: 1, Justin Walsworth, 66. 2, Roger Aiken, 69. 3 (tie), Ron Hostetler, 70; Steve Heckart, 70. RIVER’S EDGE Men’s Club, June 5 Individual Stroke Play Gross: 1, Mike Reuter, 84. 2 (tie), Dave Bryson, 89; Mike Eklund, 89. 4 (tie), Dave Hughes, 90; Derek Hampton, 90; Bob Rhodes, 90. 7 (tie), Gary Mack, 91; Keith Hillard, 9. 9 (tie), Richard Schieferstein, 93; Bob Deane, 93; Bob Drake, 93; Wayne Hohnson, 93. Net: 1, Schieferstein, 66. 2, Deane, 69. 3, Jack Tibbetts, 71. 4, David Black, 73. 5 (tie), Hughes, 74; Doug King, 74. 7 (tie), Rhodes, 75; Frank Spernak, 75. 9 (tie), Johnson, 76; Andrew Mack, 76. KPs — Richard Schieferstein, No. 14; Bob Rhodes, No. 16. SUNRIVER Men’s Club, June 6 Match Play, Round One Flight 1 — Frantz def. Calhoun, I up; D. Davis def. Olson, 5 & 4; Seegraves def. Weybright, 5 & 3; Brown d. Guilfoyle, 19 holes. Flight 2 — D. Martin def. Swezey, 1 up; Bures def. R. Hill, 3 & 1; Holmes def. Shell, 1 up; Knaupp def. Tjaden, extra hole Flight 3 — Cotton def. Carpenter, 1 up; Zant def. Hennessy, 5 & 3; Grieco def. Robertson, 3 & 2; Haselip def. Woodruff, 1 up. Flight 4 — Stedman def. Schultz, 5 & 3; Spaulding def. Wright, extra hole; V. Martin def. Sullivan, 4 & 3; Boston def. Crisler, 19 holes. Flight 5 — Walberg def. Long, 4 & 2; Freeman def. Egertson, 5 & 4; Wellnitz def. Finney, 5 & 3; Johansen def. Brooks, 2 & 1. Flight 6 — Thomas def. P. Schneider, 3 & 2; Hutchins def. Melrose, 2 & 1; Potts def. Woischke, 2 &

1; Larson vs. Phillbrook, TBD. Flight 7 — Stephens def. Pinto, 2 & 1; Porter def. Woods, 1 up; Ellis def. Vulliet, 2 up; R. Schneider def Capps, 4 & 3. KPs — Greg Cotton, No. 4; Ron Bures, No. 8; Charlie Wellnitz, No. 13; Trenton Haselip, No. 16. Individual Stroke Play — Gross: 1 (tie), Scott Brown, 74; Dan Weybright, 74. Net: 1, Woodie Thomas, 65. Hole-In-One Report June 6 QUAIL RUN Brian Meade, unknown No. 14. . . . . . . . . . . .147 yards . . . . . . . . . . . 8-iron

Professional PGA Tour St. Jude Classic Saturday At TPC Southwind Memphis, Tenn. Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,239; Par: 70 Third Round Nick O’Hern 70-67-67—204 Davis Love III 68-68-68—204 John Merrick 66-69-69—204 Dustin Johnson 70-68-67—205 Robert Allenby 68-70-67—205 Kevin Kisner 69-66-70—205 Chad Campbell 68-67-70—205 Kevin Stadler 69-65-71—205 Rory McIlroy 68-65-72—205 J.B. Holmes 70-64-72—206 Fredrik Jacobson 69-72-66—207 Roberto Castro 73-68-66—207 Luke Guthrie 69-71-67—207 Dustin Morris 71-69-67—207 Ryan Palmer 74-66-67—207 Woody Austin 72-68-67—207 Jeff Overton 67-72-68—207 Padraig Harrington 68-68-71—207 Jeff Maggert 66-68-73—207 William McGirt 71-69-68—208 Henrik Stenson 72-66-70—208 Daniel Chopra 72-65-71—208 Seung-Yul Noh 67-69-72—208 Martin Laird 72-70-67—209 Shaun Micheel 71-70-68—209 Tim Clark 69-71-69—209 Bryce Molder 69-71-69—209 Duffy Waldorf 71-69-69—209 Chris Couch 70-70-69—209 Ken Duke 68-68-73—209 Cameron Beckman 72-70-68—210 Brendon de Jonge 71-68-71—210 Danny Lee 69-70-71—210 Bill Lunde 71-68-71—210 Greg Owen 72-67-71—210 Sean O’Hair 70-69-71—210 John Peterson 72-65-73—210 Boo Weekley 70-67-73—210 Martin Flores 72-70-69—211 Billy Horschel 72-69-70—211 Arjun Atwal 67-74-70—211 David Hearn 72-69-70—211 Bob Estes 72-68-71—211 Charles Howell III 69-71-71—211 J.J. Killeen 68-69-74—211 Bart Bryant 72-70-70—212 Patrick Sheehan 71-70-71—212 Gary Christian 70-71-71—212 Craig Barlow 72-68-72—212 George McNeill 72-68-72—212 Ryo Ishikawa 72-67-73—212 Shane Bertsch 71-68-73—212 Lee Janzen 68-71-73—212 Y.E. Yang 68-71-73—212 Robert Garrigus 74-65-73—212 Paul Stankowski 69-69-74—212 Brett Wetterich 71-71-71—213 Gavin Coles 70-72-71—213 Tommy Gainey 72-70-71—213 J.J. Henry 67-74-72—213 Steven Bowditch 74-66-73—213 Stuart Appleby 72-68-73—213 Kent Jones 72-68-73—213 Troy Kelly 68-71-74—213 John Daly 68-69-76—213 Troy Matteson 70-72-72—214 Kyle Stanley 71-70-73—214 Mathew Goggin 70-71-73—214 Omar Uresti 70-72-73—215 Chris Riley 70-71-74—215 Robert Gamez 72-69-74—215 Neal Lancaster 72-70-74—216 Will Claxton 72-70-74—216 Matt McQuillan 71-69-76—216 Jonathan Fly 78-64-75—217 Zack Miller 70-70-77—217 LPGA Tour Wegmans Championship Saturday At Locust Hill Country Club Pittsford, N.Y. Purse: $2.5 million Yardage: 6,534; Par: 72 Third Round leaders Eun-Hee Ji 75-68-69—212 Karrie Webb 74-71-68—213 Giulia Sergas 69-76-69—214 Stacy Lewis 72-72-70—214 Suzann Pettersen 71-72-71—214 Inbee Park 72-70-72—214 Shanshan Feng 72-73-70—215 Jeong Jang 70-74-71—215 Jennifer Johnson 73-71-71—215 Sun Young Yoo 72-72-71—215 Sydnee Michaels 72-71-72—215 Paula Creamer 70-72-73—215 Mika Miyazato 70-72-73—215 Cristie Kerr 70-76-70—216 Jenny Shin 71-75-71—217 Gerina Piller 74-71-72—217 Ai Miyazato 70-74-73—217 Lizette Salas 74-70-73—217 Karin Sjodin 75-69-73—217 So Yeon Ryu 73-70-74—217 Sandra Gal 71-71-75—217 Se Ri Pak 70-71-76—217 Morgan Pressel 74-75-69—218 Na Yeon Choi 70-73-75—218 Jodi Ewart 75-72-72—219 I.K. Kim 73-73-73—219 Sophie Gustafson 73-72-74—219 Nicole Castrale 76-74-70—220 Marcy Hart 72-75-73—220 Hee Young Park 77-70-73—220 Mina Harigae 74-72-74—220 Lexi Thompson 74-72-74—220 Maude-Aimee Leblanc 72-73-75—220 Ryann O’Toole 69-76-75—220 Mi Jung Hur 74-69-77—220 Haru Nomura 74-77-70—221 Mariajo Uribe 74-76-71—221 Pornanong Phatlum 75-74-72—221 Christel Boeljon 74-74-73—221 Hee-Won Han 74-74-73—221 Brittany Lincicome 76-73-73—222 Beatriz Recari 69-78-75—222 Leta Lindley 78-73-72—223 Anna Nordqvist 74-77-72—223 Meaghan Francella 76-74-73—223 Haeji Kang 77-73-73—223 Alison Walshe 73-77-73—223 Chella Choi 75-74-74—223 Ji Young Oh 77-72-74—223 Candie Kung 71-77-75—223 Brittany Lang 72-75-76—223 Catriona Matthew 75-72-76—223 Champions Tour Regions Tradition Saturday At Shoal Creek Birmingham, Ala. Purse: $2.2 million Yardage: 7,197; Par: 72 Third Round leaders Tom Lehman 69-69-68—206 Peter Senior 71-71-66—208 Jeff Sluman 70-68-70—208 Fred Funk 67-71-71—209 Brad Bryant 69-69-71—209 Bill Glasson 66-69-74—209 Russ Cochran 69-68-72—209 Chien Soon Lu 72-69-69—210 Dan Forsman 66-73-71—210 Bernhard Langer 68-71-71—210 Steve Pate 73-70-69—212 Kenny Perry 74-67-71—212 Fred Couples 73-72-68—213 Jay Haas 73-72-68—213 Morris Hatalsky 70-73-70—213 Rod Spittle 73-70-70—213 Larry Mize 70-70-73—213 David Frost 74-71-69—214 Michael Allen 73-72-69—214 Wayne Levi 70-71-73—214 Mark Calcavecchia 73-69-73—215 Bob Tway 74-67-74—215 Mike Goodes 70-70-75—215

Bruce Fleisher Jay Don Blake Peter Jacobsen Tom Jenkins Kirk Triplett Scott Simpson Jim Gallagher, Jr. Hal Sutton Steve Jones Tom Pernice Jr. Gary Hallberg Corey Pavin Joey Sindelar Fulton Allem Loren Roberts Andrew Magee Jerry Pate Hale Irwin D.A. Weibring Larry Nelson Sandy Lyle Jim Thorpe Bruce Vaughan David Peoples Mark Brooks

69-72-75—216 74-74-69—217 74-71-72—217 71-73-73—217 70-73-74—217 73-75-70—218 73-74-71—218 73-72-73—218 77-71-71—219 77-70-72—219 70-75-74—219 72-73-74—219 70-75-74—219 72-71-76—219 72-75-73—220 72-74-74—220 76-70-74—220 72-71-77—220 76-73-72—221 73-76-72—221 75-73-73—221 73-75-73—221 74-73-74—221 78-69-74—221 73-74-74—221

HOCKEY NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) ——— STANLEY CUP FINALS Los Angeles 3, New Jersey 2 Wednesday, May 30: Los Angeles 2, New Jersey 1, OT Saturday, June 2: Los Angeles 2, at New Jersey 1, OT Monday, June 4: Los Angeles 4, New Jersey 0 Wednesday, June 6: New Jersey 3, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, June 9: New Jersey 2, Los Angeles 1. Monday, June 11: New Jersey at Los Angeles, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 13: Los Angeles at New Jersey, 5 p.m.

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION NBA Playoff Glance All Times PDT (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) ——— CONFERENCE FINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 4, Boston 3 Monday, May 28: Miami 93, Boston 79 Wednesday, May 30: Miami 115, Boston 111, OT Friday, June 1: Boston 101, Miami 91 Sunday, June 3: Boston 93, Miami 91, OT Tuesday, June 5: Boston 94, Miami 90 Thursday, June 7: Miami 98, Boston 79 Saturday, June 9: Miami 101, Boston 88 WESTERN CONFERENCE Oklahoma City 4, San Antonio 2 Sunday, May 27: San Antonio 101, Oklahoma City 98 Tuesday, May 29: San Antonio 120, Oklahoma City 111 Thursday, May 31: Oklahoma City 102, San Antonio 82 Saturday, June 2: Oklahoma City 109, San Antonio 103 Monday: June 4: Oklahoma City 108, San Antonio 103 Wednesday, June 6: Oklahoma City 107, San Antonio 99 FINALS Oklahoma City vs. Miami Tuesday, June 12: Miami at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Thursday, June 14: Miami at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Sunday, June 17: Oklahoma City at Miami, 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 19: Oklahoma City at Miami, 6 p.m. x-Thursday, June 21: Oklahoma City at Miami, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 24: Miami at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 26: Miami at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Saturday’s Summary

Heat 101, Celtics 88 BOSTON (88) Pierce 7-18 3-5 19, Bass 6-8 4-4 16, Garnett 612 2-2 14, Rondo 10-22 1-2 22, Allen 5-11 2-2 15, Stiemsma 0-0 0-0 0, Pietrus 0-2 0-0 0, Hollins 1-1 00 2, Dooling 0-1 0-0 0, Daniels 0-0 0-0 0, Moore 0-0 0-0 0, Pavlovic 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-75 12-15 88. MIAMI (101) James 9-21 12-17 31, Battier 4-9 0-0 12, Haslem 3-4 1-2 7, Chalmers 4-6 0-0 9, Wade 8-17 7-8 23, Bosh 8-10 0-0 19, Miller 0-2 0-0 0, Cole 0-0 0-0 0, Jones 0-1 0-0 0, Howard 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 36-70 20-27 101. Boston 27 26 20 15 — 88 Miami 23 23 27 28 — 101 3-Point Goals—Boston 6-19 (Allen 3-8, Pierce 2-6, Rondo 1-2, Dooling 0-1, Pietrus 0-2), Miami 926 (Battier 4-9, Bosh 3-4, Chalmers 1-3, James 1-5, Jones 0-1, Miller 0-2, Wade 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Boston 39 (Rondo 10), Miami 45 (James 12). Assists—Boston 19 (Rondo 14), Miami 16 (Chalmers 7). Total Fouls—Boston 24, Miami 14. Technicals—Rondo, Wade. A—20,114 (19,600).

WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct GB Chicago 5 1 .833 — Connecticut 5 1 .833 — Indiana 4 2 .667 1 Atlanta 3 4 .429 2½ New York 3 5 .375 3 Washington 1 5 .167 4 Western Conference W L Pct GB Minnesota 9 0 1.000 — Los Angeles 6 1 .857 2 San Antonio 3 4 .429 5 Phoenix 2 5 .286 6 Seattle 1 6 .143 7 Tulsa 0 8 .000 8½ ——— Saturday’s Games San Antonio 80, Seattle 67 Minnesota 93, Tulsa 73 Today’s Games Chicago at New York, 1 p.m. Atlanta at Connecticut, 2 p.m.

TENNIS Professional French Open Saturday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $23.47 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Women Championship Maria Sharapova (2), Russia, def. Sara Errani (21), Italy, 6-3, 6-2. Doubles Men Championship Max Mirnyi, Belarus, and Daniel Nestor (1), Canada, def. Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan (2), United States, 6-4, 6-4.

MOTOR SPORTS IndyCar Firestone 550 Saturday At Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Starting position in parentheses) 1. (17) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 228, Running. 2. (3) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 228, Running. 3. (10) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 228, Running. 4. (6) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 228, Running. 5. (23) J.R. Hildebrand, Dallara-Chevrolet, 228, Running. 6. (9) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Honda, 228, Running. 7. (15) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Chevrolet, 227, Running.

8. (5) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 227, Running. 9. (1) Alex Tagliani, Dallara-Honda, 227, Running. 10. (21) James Jakes, Dallara-Honda, 227, Running. 11. (7) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 227, Running. 12. (19) Ed Carpenter, Dallara-Chevrolet, 227, Running. 13. (25) Josef Newgarden, Dallara-Honda, 226, Running. 14. (2) Dario Franchitti, Dallara-Honda, 225, Running. 15. (22) Katherine Legge, Dallara-Chevrolet, 224, Running. 16. (18) Mike Conway, Dallara-Honda, 224, Running. 17. (8) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Chevrolet, 222, Running. 18. (4) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 173, Contact. 19. (14) E.J. Viso, Dallara-Chevrolet, 129, Mechanical. 20. (11) Oriol Servia, Dallara-Chevrolet, 89, Mechanical. 21. (13) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Chevrolet, 66, Mechanical. 22. (20) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 63, Contact. 23. (16) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Honda, 29, Contact. 24. (12) Rubens Barrichello, Dallara-Chevrolet, 0, Did Not Start. 25. (24) Simona de Silvestro, Dallara-Lotus, 0, Did Not Start. ——— Race Statistics Points: Power 256, Dixon 220, Hinchcliffe 208, Castroneves 203, Pagenaud 199, Franchitti 192, Hunter-Reay 181, Briscoe 177, Kanaan 160, Wilson 156.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Pocono 400 Lineup After Saturday qualifying; race today At Pocono Raceway Long Pond, Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number in parentheses) 1. (20) Joey Logano, Toyota, 179.598 mph. 2. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 178.866. 3. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 178.582. 4. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 178.575. 5. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 178.543. 6. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 178.228. 7. (78) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 178.158. 8. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 177.939. 9. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 177.862. 10. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 177.823. 11. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 177.658. 12. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 177.536. 13. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 177.518. 14. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 177.501. 15. (83) Landon Cassill, Toyota, 177.204. 16. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 177.026. 17. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 176.988. 18. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 176.852. 19. (22) A J Allmendinger, Dodge, 176.803. 20. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 176.658. 21. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 176.543. 22. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 176.419. 23. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 176.16. 24. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 176.149. 25. (51) David Reutimann, Chevrolet, 176.074. 26. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 175.596. 27. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 175.575. 28. (19) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 175.387. 29. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 175.159. 30. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 175.073. 31. (2) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 174.88. 32. (49) J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 173.943. 33. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 173.869. 34. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 173.853. 35. (26) Josh Wise, Ford, 173.497. 36. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 173.24. 37. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 171.854. 38. (23) Scott Riggs, Chevrolet, 171.52. 39. (74) Stacy Compton, Chevrolet, 171.155. 40. (36) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, 167.411. 41. (32) Reed Sorenson, Ford, owner points. 42. (10) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, owner points. 43. (33) Stephen Leicht, Chevrolet, 170.345. Failed to Qualify 44. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 170.004.

Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix Lineup After Saturday qualifying; race today At Circuit Gilles Villeneuve Montreal, Canada Lap length: 2.71 miles Third Session 1. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 1 minute, 13.784 seconds. 2. Lewis Hamilton, England, McLaren, 1:14.087. 3. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 1:14.151. 4. Mark Webber, Australia, Red Bull, 1:14.346. 5. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 1:14.411. 6. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Ferrari, 1:14.465. 7. Romain Grosjean, France, Lotus, 1:14.645. 8. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India, 1:14.705. 9. Michael Schumacher, Germany, Mercedes, 1:14.812. 10. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 1:15.182. Eliminated after second session 11. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Sauber, 1:14.688. 12. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Lotus, 1:14.734. 13. Nico Hulkenberg, Germany, Force India, 1:14.748. 14. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, Toro Rosso, 1:15.078. 15. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Sauber, 1:15.156. 16. Bruno Senna, Brazil, Williams, 1:15.170. 17. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 1:15.231. Eliminated after first session 18. Heikki Kovalainen, Finland, Caterham, 1:16.263. 19. Vitaly Petrov, Russia, Caterham, 1:16.482. 20. Jean-Eric Vergne, France, Toro Rosso, 1:16.602. 21. Pedro de la Rosa, Spain, HRT, 1:17.492. 22. Timo Glock, Germany, Marussia, 1:17.901. 23. Charles Pic, France, Marussia, 1:18.255. 24. Narain Karthikeyan, India, HRT, 1:18.330.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Recalled RHP Tommy Hunter from Norfolk (IL). Optioned RHP Miguel Gonzalez from Norfolk. BOSTON RED SOX—Activated RHP Daisuke Matsuzaka and OF Ryan Kalish from the 60-day DL. Optioned Kalish to Pawtucket (IL). Designated OF Marlon Byrd for assignment. Transferred OF Jason Repko to the 60-day DL. DETROIT TIGERS—Activated OF Austin Jackson from the 15-day DL. Recalled INF Herman Perez from Lakeland (FSL). Placed SS Jhonny Peralta on paternity leave. Optioned RHP Jose Ortega to Toledo (IL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Placed RHP Felipe Paulino on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Nate Adcock from Omaha (PCL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Activated RHP LaTroy Hawkins from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Bobby Cassevah to Salt Lake City (PCL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Claimed RHP Daniel Farquhar off waivers from Toronto and assigned him to Sacramento (PCL). Agreed to terms with C Bruce Maxwell, OF Matthew Hillsinger, RHP Kristopher Hall and RHP Ryan Dull to minor league contracts. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Agreed to terms with C Stryker Trahan on a minor league contract. ATLANTA BRAVES—Optioned C J.C. Boscan to Gwinnett (IL). COLORADO ROCKIES—Agreed to terms with LHP Jeff Francis on a one-year contract. Designated RHP Esmil Rogers for assignment. HOUSTON ASTROS—Recalled INF Matt Downs from Oklahoma City (PCL). Placed OF Fernando Martinez on the 7-day concussion DL. Agreed to terms with RHP Daniel Minor, OF Daniel Gulbransen, RHP Aaron West, INF Austin Elkins, INF Angel Ibanez, RHP Christian Garcia, RHP Jordan Jankowski and RHP Michael Dimock on minor league contracts. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Claimed LHP John Gaub off waivers from Texas and optioned him to Memphis (PCL). Agreed to terms with 3B Patrick Wisdom, C Steve Bean, LHP Tim Cooney, RHP Kyle Barraclough, OF Yoenny Gonzalez, C Rowan Wick, INF Jacob Wilson, INF Brett Wiley, INF Anthony Melchionda, INF Bruce Caldwell, RHP Joe Scanio, RHP Chris Perry, 1B Jeremy Schaffer, RHP Steven Gallardo, OF Matthew Young, INF Jacoby Almaraz, LHP Lee Stoppelman, RHP Dixon Llorens, LHP Steven Sabatino, RHP Joey Cuda, OF Dodson McPherson, LHP Kyle Helisek, RHP Joey Donofrio, RHP Ronnie Shaban, LHP Mark Trentacosta, LHP Ben O’Shea and RHP Michael Aldrete on minor league contracts. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Activated 3B Pablo Sandoval from the 15-day DL. COLLEGE NEW MEXICO—Announced men’s sophomore basketball F Merv Lindsay is transferring from Kansas.


SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

D3

BOXING

NBA PLAYOFFS: EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS

Pacquiao falls to Bradley in controversial decision

Heat advance to finals

By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Timothy Bradley didn’t need big power to beat Manny Pacquiao after all. Bradley won a contested split decision over Pacquiao, ending the Filipino fighter’s remarkable run and handing him his first defeat in seven years. It didn’t come easy and it wasn’t without controversy, with the pro-Pacquiao crowd booing loudly when the decision was announced. Pacquiao landed more punches and seemed to land the harder punches. But when the scorecards were added up, Bradley was up 115-113 on two scorecards and behind by the same margin on a third. The Associated Press had Pacquiao winning 117-111.

Pacquiao tried to turn the fight into a brawl, using his power to hurt Bradley in the early rounds. But Bradley changed tactics in the middle rounds and used his boxing skills to win enough rounds to take the narrow decision for the welterweight title. “I thought I won the fight,” Bradley said. “I didn’t think he was as good as everyone says he was. I didn’t feel his power.” Ringside punching statistics showed Pacquiao landing 253 punches to 159 for Bradley, who vowed before the fight to take the 147-pound title from Pacquiao. Bradley was so confident that he had oversized tickets printed up for a Nov. 10 rematch that will now likely happen.

O A TELEVISION Today TENNIS 6 a.m.: French Open, men’s final, NBC. SOCCER 8:45 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, Spain vs. Italy, ESPN. 11:30 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, Republic of Ireland vs. Croatia, ESPN. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, Florida vs. North Carolina State, ESPN2. 10 a.m.: MLB, New York Mets at New York Yankees, TBS. 1 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, Baylor vs. Arkansas, ESPN2. 1 p.m.: MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 4 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, South Carolina vs. Oklahoma, ESPN2. 5 p.m.: MLB, Detroit Tigers at Cincinnati Reds, ESPN. 7 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, Oregon vs. Kent State, ESPNU. MOTORSPORTS 10 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup: Pocono 400, TNT. 11 a.m.: Formula One racing, Canadian Grand Prix, Fox. GOLF 11 a.m.: LPGA Tour, LPGA Championship, final round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGA Tour, St. Jude Classic, final round, CBS. 4:30 p.m.: Champions Tour, Regions Tradition, final round, Golf Channel.

GYMNASTICS 1 p.m.: 2012 Visa Championships, NBC. CYCLING 4 p.m.: Criterium du Dauphine, stage 7 (same-day tape), NBC Sports Network. 7 p.m.: Tour de Suisse, stage 2 (same-day tape), NBC Sports Network.

• Tyson Gay returns to competition with 10.0 100: Former world champion Tyson Gay made a successful return to competition, running the 100 meters in 10.0 seconds into a headwind at the Adidas Grand Prix in New York. The 29-year-old American had not raced since hip surgery last July. He entered the “B” final of the 100 on Saturday to get some race experience before the U.S. Olympic trials at the end of the month. Gay says he felt no pain during the event and is relieved to get the jitters out.

Swimming • Grevers adds 200 backstroke to his trials program: Matt Grevers isn’t swimming the 200-meter backstroke just for training anymore. After he won easily at the Mutual of Omaha Swimvitational on Saturday night in Omaha, Neb., Grevers said he plans to battle Tyler Clary for the second spot in the event on the U.S. Olympic team. The first, barring unforeseen circumstances, belongs to Ryan Lochte. Grevers won the silver medal in the 100 backstroke in 2008 in Beijing and had been using the 200 to build strength for his specialty. But he popped a 1:57.59 in Columbus, Ohio, in March, and since then has been serious

• James, Wade come through in Game 7; Miami will face Oklahoma City for title By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

Monday SOCCER 8:45 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, France vs. England, ESPN. 11:30 a.m.: UEFA European Championship, Ukraine vs. Sweden, ESPN. BASEBALL 10 a.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, teams TBA (if necessary), ESPN2. 1 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, teams TBA (if necessary), ESPN2. 4 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, teams TBA (if necessary), ESPN2. 4 p.m.: College, NCAA super regionals, Oregon vs. Kent State (if necessary), ESPNU. 4 p.m.: MLB, Boston Red Sox at Miami Marlins, ESPN. CYCLING 2 p.m.: Tour de Suisse, stage 3 (same-day tape), NBC Sports Network. HOCKEY 5 p.m.: NHL playoffs, Stanley Cup finals, New Jersey Devils at Los Angeles Kings (if necessary), NBC.

MIAMI — LeBron James finally got a Game 7 victory, on his third try. Next up, the NBA finals — and his third try at that elusive first championship. James had 31 points and 12 rebounds, Chris Bosh hit a career-best three three-pointers — the last sparking the run that put it away — and the Miami Heat won their second straight Eastern Conference title by beating the Boston Celtics 101-88 in Game 7 on Saturday night. Miami opens the title series in Oklahoma City on Tuesday night. Dwyane Wade scored and Shane Battier added 12 for the Heat, who won a Game 7 for the first time since 2004 — Wade’s rookie season. Rajon Rondo finished with 22 points, 14 assists and 10 rebounds for Boston, which got 19 points from Paul Pierce in what might be the last game of the “Big Four” era for the Celtics. Boston took out its starters with 28.3 seconds left. By

Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

S B Track and field

Lynne Sladky / The Associated Press

Miami Heat’s Dwyane Wade, left, and LeBron James stand together during the trophy presentation following the Heat’s 101-88 victory over the Boston Celtics in Game 7 of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals on Saturday in Miami.

then, workers already had a rope around the perimeter of the court, preparing for the East trophy presentation. When Heat President Pat Riley was shown on the giant overhead video screen in the moments just after the final buzzer, the crowd screamed. Riley finally acknowledged them with some claps, before the 2012 Eastern Conference champions logo was shown as players below the scoreboard high-fived and hugged, all wearing the new T-shirts and caps that marked the accomplishment. The screams kept coming, first when Alonzo Mourning took the microphone — “We still got a lot of work to do,” Mourning said — and then again when he handed the trophy to Heat owner Micky Arison. “A roller-coaster ride,” Arison said. A roller-coaster game, too. In a roller-coaster season. All worth it — for now, anyway. The next step awaits, another shot at the finals. In a championship-or-bust season, the Heat board a plane for

Devils stave off elimination • New Jersey wins Game 5 to keep title dreams alive; series returns to Los Angeles

Gymnastics

By Tom Canavan

Cycling • Colombian wins Dauphine 6th stage; Wiggins leads: Colombian rider Nairo Quintana won the sixth stage of the Criterium du Dauphine in the French Alps, while Britain’s Bradley Wiggins retained the overall lead on Saturday. Quintana, of Spanish team Movistar, raced into Morzine alone, pulling ahead of his rivals halfway up the final climb of the Col de Joux Plane to finish the 104-mile mountain stage in 4 hours, 46 minutes, 12 seconds. — From wire reports

6:54 remaining. They were on their way. “He was big time — every shot, every defensive play, every rebound — we missed him,” James said of Bosh. “We’re just happy to have him back at the right time. If it wasn’t for him and the rest of the guys that stepped up, we don’t win this game.” James made a three-pointer — it went into the books as a 30-footer, as he leaped from atop one of the Eastern Conference finals stickers on the floor — as the shot clock was expiring with just under 6 minutes left, making it 91-84. Even mistakes were going Miami’s way, as James lost a behind-the-back dribble, only to have the ball skip right into Battier’s hands. Bosh scored from inside the lane to end that possession. Wade scored on the next one, the lead was 95-86 with 3:23 left, Boston called time and the building was simply rocking. James did plenty of talking on the Heat bench in that stoppage, clearly saying the word “Finish” at one point. They listened. A three-point play by Wade with 2:53 left all but sealed it, the Heat were up 12, and Oklahoma City beckoned.

NHL: STANLEY CUP FINALS

about making a run at the 200 at the trials.

• Orozco edges Leyva for U.S. championship: John Orozco rallied to win the U.S. men’s gymnastics championships on Saturday, edging defending champion Danell Leyva on the last rotation to give the Americans a potent one-two punch at next month’s London Olympics. The 19-year-old from the Bronx trailed Leyva by two points with two events to go before putting together a pair of spectacular routines on high bar and floor exercise to lift the three-time U.S. junior champion to victory in St. Louis. Orozco finished with a two-round total of 184.850, barely ahead of Leyva’s 184.800.

Oklahoma City today. “We have been through a lot,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. Down by seven at the half and eight early in the third quarter, Miami started clawing back. An 8-0 run tied it at 59-all, capped by Wade hitting a jumper, and then the fun really started. There were six lead changes and five more ties in the final 7 minutes of the third. Bosh scored with 29 seconds left for the last of those ties, and it was 73-all going into the fourth. Six games decided nothing, and nothing was decided in Game 7 until the very last moments, neither team yielding much of anything. Battier’s three-pointer with 8:06 left in the third cut Boston’s lead at the time to 59-57. And back and forth they went. For the next 13 minutes, a span of 46 dizzying, unbelievable possessions, neither team led by more than two points. That finally changed when Bosh his third three-pointer with 7:17 left. James made a runner on the next Miami trip, and suddenly the Heat had their biggest lead of the night to that point, 88-82 with

The Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. — Bryce Salvador scored on a deflection off a defenseman and the New Jersey Devils derailed Los Angeles’ Stanley Cup coronation for a second time, beating the Kings 2-1 in Game 5 of the finals Saturday night. Zach Parise ended a fivegame goal drought on a rare mistake by goalie Jonathan Quick, and Martin Brodeur stopped 25 shots to help the Devils end the Kings’ 10-game postseason winning streak on the road and 12-game run over the past two years, both NHL records. “That’s how a goalie wins the game for you,” Parise said about Brodeur. Justin Williams scored for the Kings, whose once seemingly insurmountable 3-0 series lead has been cut to 3-2. Game 6 is Monday night in Los Angeles. More importantly, the Devils have the Kings wondering what’s going on for the first time in the postseason. This marks the first time they have lost consecutive games this postseason, and the Devils are halfway up a mountain that only one other NHL team has climbed in the finals after losing the first

three games. Only the 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs came back in a best-of-seven finals and won. Three years later, the Detroit Red Wings rallied from a 3-0 deficit to tie the series, but they lost Game 7 to Toronto. The Kings haven’t played terribly in losing the last two games, but the Devils have made the plays when it counted or gotten the breaks when they needed them. Take Salvador’s winner, his first goal in seven games. His shot from the left point was deflected right in front of Quick, hit off the chest of Kings defenseman Slava Voynov and rebounded into the net at 9:05 of the second period. It was the second time in this series that a point shot by a Devils defenseman hit off Voynov and caromed past his goaltender. This one turned out to be a winner because Brodeur stood tall the rest of the way and had one shot hit off the goalpost and had a goal by Jarret Stoll on a second-period power play waved off because he hit the rebound with his stick too high. Brodeur’s biggest save might have been with 7.6 seconds to go in regulation when he stopped a slap shot by Mike Richards from the right circle. The Kings, overtime win-

Julio Cortez / The Associated Press

New Jersey Devils’ Bryce Salvador, right, celebrates with Anton Volchenkov after scoring in the second period during Game 5 of the Stanley Cup finals, Saturday in Newark, N.J.

ners in the first two games in the series in New Jersey, never got another shot and Brodeur took a patented victory swig of the Gatorade bottle on top of his net, as he has done for 18 years. However, there was no overwhelming celebration from the home team. Slaps on the pads, a few head nods, then it was off to the locker room. The Kings meanwhile, heads down, made a bee line for their locker room. As the crowd filed out, again to the 1984 Bruce Springsteen hit, “Glory Days,” the chants of “Mar-tee! Mar-tee! were loud and long. The Kings seemingly had

the territorial advantage in the opening period but they also made the biggest mistake. And it came from a guy who has been almost flawless in the postseason — Quick. With Willie Mitchell serving the final 20 seconds of a penalty for interference, Quick played a puck in front of his net and tried to send it around the net into the corner. The puck slid off his stick, went around the net and barely made it to the right edge of the crease. Parise, who had not scored in five games, darted to the edge of the net and stuffed it home a split second before Quick could cover the corner of the net.


D4

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES

Interleague Boxscores Orioles 6, Phillies 4 (12 innings) Philadelphia AB R H Rollins ss 6 1 1 Pierre lf 6 1 2 Pence rf 5 0 4 Thome dh 4 1 2 1-Mayberry pr-dh 1 0 0 Victorino cf 5 0 1 Wigginton 3b 5 0 1 Fontenot 2b 5 0 0 Luna 1b 4 1 2 Schneider c 3 0 0 c-Ruiz ph-c 2 0 0 Totals 46 4 13

BI 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1

SO 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 3

Avg. .244 .318 .277 .241 .224 .256 .269 .342 .324 .246 .349

Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. En.Chavez lf-rf 6 0 1 0 0 0 .172 Hardy ss 5 1 0 0 1 0 .253 C.Davis dh 4 1 1 1 2 1 .298 Ad.Jones cf 6 1 2 2 0 2 .298 Wieters c 5 0 1 1 0 1 .245 N.Johnson 1b 3 1 2 0 0 0 .197 a-Mar.Reynolds ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .211 Betemit 3b 5 1 0 0 0 1 .220 Flaherty rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .182 b-Pearce ph-lf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .222 Andino 2b 5 1 1 0 0 3 .244 Totals 45 6 9 5 3 10 Philadelphia 001 110 010 000 — 4 13 3 Baltimore 001 200 100 002 — 6 9 1 No outs when winning run scored. a-was hit by a pitch for N.Johnson in the 7th. bstruck out for Flaherty in the 8th. c-grounded into a double play for Schneider in the 9th. 1-ran for Thome in the 8th. E—Rollins (4), Fontenot (2), Worley (1), Andino (9). LOB—Philadelphia 7, Baltimore 10. HR—Rollins (4), off Tom.Hunter; Thome (1), off Tom.Hunter; Luna (2), off Tom.Hunter; Ad.Jones (17), off Rosenberg. DP—Baltimore 4. Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Worley 6 5 3 1 1 5 93 3.17 Diekman 1 2 1 1 1 0 20 4.66 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 2 8 2.21 Qualls 2 1 0 0 0 2 28 4.88 Rosenberg L, 0-1 1 1 2 2 1 1 24 18.00 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tom.Hunter 7 8 3 3 0 2 86 5.40 Strop BS, 3-6 1 3 1 1 0 0 24 1.48 Ji.Johnson 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 1.33 O’Day 2 1 0 0 0 1 21 1.84 Ayala W, 2-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 16 1.93 Rosenberg pitched to 2 batters in the 12th. T—3:20. A—46,611 (45,971).

Angels 11, Rockies 5 Los Angeles Trout cf-lf Tor.Hunter rf Pujols 1b Trumbo lf Bourjos cf H.Kendrick 2b Callaspo 3b Aybar ss Hester c Haren p Hawkins p a-Calhoun ph Takahashi p Isringhausen p Frieri p Totals

AB 5 4 3 5 0 5 3 5 5 2 0 1 0 0 0 38

R 3 3 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

H 3 3 2 0 0 3 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 15

BI 2 0 4 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10

BB 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

SO 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 5

Avg. .349 .263 .253 .321 .219 .262 .248 .215 .290 .000 --.250 -------

Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fowler cf 4 0 0 0 1 3 .281 Scutaro ss 5 1 2 1 0 1 .261 C.Gonzalez lf 5 1 2 1 0 0 .320 Giambi 1b 4 0 1 0 1 1 .256 Pacheco 3b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .291 Moscoso p 1 0 1 0 0 0 .333 Brothers p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-E.Young ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .245 Ottavino p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Mat.Reynolds p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 c-Cuddyer ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .269 Colvin rf 4 2 3 2 0 0 .283 Nieves c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .235 LeMahieu 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .229 Francis p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Nelson 3b 3 1 2 1 0 0 .241 Totals 38 5 13 5 2 7 Los Angeles 231 202 010 — 11 15 0 Colorado 110 011 100 — 5 13 0 a-struck out for Hawkins in the 7th. b-flied out for Brothers in the 7th. c-grounded into a double play for Mat.Reynolds in the 9th. LOB—Los Angeles 6, Colorado 9. 2B—Giambi (4), Moscoso (1). HR—Pujols (9), off Moscoso; Scutaro (3), off Haren; Colvin (4), off Haren; C.Gonzalez (15), off Haren; Nelson (2), off Haren; Colvin (5), off Takahashi. SB—Trout 2 (13), Tor.Hunter (2), H.Kendrick (4). DP—Los Angeles 1; Colorado 1. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Haren W, 4-6 5 1-3 10 4 4 1 4 107 3.73 Hawkins 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 1.00 Takahashi 1 1 1 1 0 1 15 4.87 Isringhausen 1 0 0 0 1 0 13 2.08 Frieri 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 0.00 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Francis L, 0-1 3 1-3 10 8 8 1 1 74 21.60 Moscoso 2 2-3 4 2 2 2 2 42 9.56 Brothers 1 0 0 0 0 2 20 4.66 Ottavino 1 0 1 1 1 0 11 1.80 Mat.Reynolds 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 4.07 T—3:21. A—37,801 (50,398).

Giants 5, Rangers 2 Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus ss Hamilton lf Beltre 3b Mi.Young 1b N.Cruz rf Dav.Murphy rf Napoli c Gentry cf Feldman p R.Ross p Uehara p a-Moreland ph Scheppers p c-B.Snyder ph Totals

AB 4 3 3 4 4 3 1 3 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 30

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2

H 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 5

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2

BB 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

SO 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4

Avg. .271 .296 .338 .297 .283 .258 .252 .260 .333 .000 .000 --.277 --.308

San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Blanco lf 5 1 2 0 0 1 .291 Theriot 2b 4 0 1 2 0 1 .273 Sandoval 3b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .313 Posey c 4 0 1 0 0 2 .295 Pagan cf 3 1 2 1 1 0 .320 Belt 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .228 Schierholtz rf 4 0 2 1 0 2 .245 B.Crawford ss 4 1 0 0 0 1 .222 Vogelsong p 3 1 1 0 0 1 .043 Ja.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Romo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-A.Huff ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .143 Hensley p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 S.Casilla p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 36 5 10 5 1 9 Texas 000 000 011 — 2 5 3 San Francisco 001 011 20x — 5 10 0 a-homered for Uehara in the 8th. b-flied out for Romo in the 8th. c-struck out for Scheppers in the 9th. E—Hamilton (3), Kinsler (7), Uehara (1). LOB— Texas 7, San Francisco 8. 2B—Hamilton (13), Pagan (12), Schierholtz (2). 3B—Schierholtz (4). HR—Moreland (9), off Vogelsong; Napoli (11), off Hensley. SB—Theriot (4). DP—San Francisco 1. Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Feldman L, 0-5 5 1-3 4 3 2 1 7 91 6.39 R.Ross 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 9 1.47 Uehara 1 4 2 2 0 1 25 2.11 Scheppers 1 1 0 0 0 1 12 3.38 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vogelsong W, 5-2 7 2-3 3 1 1 3 3 111 2.26 Ja.Lopez 0 1 0 0 0 0 4 3.29 Romo 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 0.53 Hensley 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 12 2.28 S.Casilla S, 16-17 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 1.44 Ja.Lopez pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:00. A—41,704 (41,915).

Tigers 3, Reds 2 Detroit A.Jackson cf

AB R H BI BB SO Avg. 4 0 0 0 0 1 .321

American League Tampa Bay New York Baltimore Toronto Boston

W 34 33 33 30 29

L 25 25 26 29 30

Chicago Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Minnesota

W 33 31 27 24 24

L 26 27 32 33 34

Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland

W 34 31 27 26

L 26 29 34 34

East Division Pct GB WCGB .576 — — .569 ½ — .559 1 — .508 4 3 .492 5 4 Central Division Pct GB WCGB .559 — — .534 1½ 1½ .458 6 6 .421 8 8 .414 8½ 8½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .567 — — .517 3 2½ .443 7½ 7 .433 8 7½

Saturday’s Games Minnesota 11, Chicago Cubs 3 Baltimore 6, Philadelphia 4, 12 innings San Francisco 5, Texas 2 Atlanta 5, Toronto 2 Washington 4, Boston 2 Detroit 3, Cincinnati 2 Chicago White Sox 10, Houston 1

National League

L10 5-5 7-3 4-6 5-5 4-6

Str Home Away W-3 19-11 15-14 W-2 18-12 15-13 W-1 15-14 18-12 L-3 16-12 14-17 L-2 14-18 15-12

L10 6-4 4-6 4-6 5-5 8-2

Str Home Away W-1 16-17 17-9 L-1 16-16 15-11 W-1 13-16 14-16 L-3 8-20 16-13 W-3 11-17 13-17

L10 3-7 6-4 6-4 4-6

Str Home Away L-1 15-11 19-15 W-2 16-14 15-15 L-1 10-14 17-20 L-2 13-16 13-18

L.A. Angels 11, Colorado 5 St. Louis 2, Cleveland 0 Pittsburgh 5, Kansas City 3 L.A. Dodgers 8, Seattle 3 N.Y. Yankees 4, N.Y. Mets 2 Tampa Bay 13, Miami 4 Arizona 8, Oakland 3

Washington Atlanta New York Miami Philadelphia

W 34 34 32 31 29

L 23 25 28 28 32

Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Houston Chicago

W 32 31 31 27 25 19

L 26 27 29 32 34 40

Los Angeles San Francisco Arizona Colorado San Diego

W 38 34 29 24 20

L 22 26 30 34 40

East Division Pct GB WCGB .596 — — .576 1 — .533 3½ 2 .525 4 2½ .475 7 5½ Central Division Pct GB WCGB .552 — — .534 1 2 .517 2 3 .458 5½ 6½ .424 7½ 8½ .322 13½ 14½ West Division Pct GB WCGB .633 — — .567 4 — .492 8½ 4½ .414 13 9 .333 18 14

Today’s Games N.Y. Mets (Niese 4-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Pettitte 3-2), 10:05 a.m. Tampa Bay (Shields 6-4) at Miami (A.Sanchez 3-4), 10:10 a.m. Kansas City (B.Chen 5-5) at Pittsburgh (A.J.Burnett 5-2), 10:35 a.m. Philadelphia (Cl.Lee 0-3) at Baltimore (Hammel 6-2), 10:35 a.m. Toronto (R.Romero 7-1) at Atlanta (Teheran 0-0), 10:35 a.m. Washington (Zimmermann 3-5) at Boston (Lester 3-4), 10:35 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Dempster 1-3) at Minnesota (Liriano 1-6), 11:10 a.m.

L10 5-5 8-2 4-6 4-6 3-7

Str Home Away W-2 18-10 16-13 W-6 14-11 20-14 L-2 19-12 13-16 L-5 16-15 15-13 L-1 12-19 17-13

L10 5-5 7-3 4-6 6-4 3-7 2-8

Str Home Away L-1 17-12 15-14 W-3 18-11 13-16 W-1 14-12 17-17 L-1 15-17 12-15 L-1 18-14 7-20 L-4 12-15 7-25

L10 6-4 7-3 7-3 5-5 3-7

Str Home Away W-1 21-9 17-13 W-1 19-12 15-14 W-4 14-16 15-14 L-4 15-17 9-17 W-1 14-20 6-20

Houston (Harrell 5-4) at Chicago White Sox (Humber 2-3), 11:10 a.m. San Diego (Bass 2-5) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 4-5), 11:10 a.m. Cleveland (Jimenez 6-4) at St. Louis (Kelly 0-0), 11:15 a.m. L.A. Angels (E.Santana 2-7) at Colorado (Friedrich 4-1), 12:10 p.m. Texas (Ogando 1-0) at San Francisco (Lincecum 2-6), 1:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Billingsley 3-4) at Seattle (Beavan 3-5), 1:10 p.m. Oakland (Blackley 0-1) at Arizona (J.Saunders 3-4), 1:10 p.m. Detroit (Smyly 2-2) at Cincinnati (Bailey 4-4), 5:05 p.m.

MLB roundup • Giants 5, Rangers 2: SAN FRANCISCO — Ryan Vogelsong pitched a season-high 7 2⁄3 innings and won his fifth straight decision, Nate Schierholtz hit an RBI triple and San Francisco bounced back from its first shutout of the season to beat Texas. • Angels 11, Rockies 5: DENVER — Albert Pujols homered and singled to drive in four runs, Mike Trout had three hits, including a two-run single, and Los Angeles earned its eighth straight road win. • Dodgers 8, Mariners 3: SEATTLE — Jerry Hairston Jr. had a career-best five RBIs, Clayton Kershaw struck out a season-high 12 and Los Angeles rebounded from Friday’s no-hit loss. • Yankees 4, Mets 2: NEW YORK — Mark Teixeira hit a go-ahead homer and Phil Hughes won his third straight decision, sending the New York Yankees to the victory. • Tigers 3, Reds 2: CINCINNATI — Prince Fielder homered in the fourth inning and singled in the tiebreaking run in the eighth for Detroit. • Braves 5, Blue Jays 2: ATLANTA — Tommy Hanson shut down another AL East team, Dan Uggla hit a three-run homer and Atlanta picked up its season-best sixth straight win. • Nationals 4, Red Sox 2: BOSTON — Gio Gonzalez pitched 6 1⁄3 effective innings, Adam LaRoche hit a solo homer and Washington spoiled Daisuke Matsuzaka’s return from reconstructive elbow surgery.

Boesch rf Berry lf Mi.Cabrera 3b Fielder 1b D.Young lf Benoit p Valverde p R.Santiago ss Laird c Worth 2b Verlander p Villarreal p b-H.Perez ph D.Kelly lf-rf Totals

4 0 3 4 4 0 0 4 4 3 1 0 1 1 33

1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 7 3 2 4

.237 .288 .317 .316 .255 ----.208 .310 .196 .000 --.000 .182

Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Cozart ss 5 0 0 0 0 1 .244 Heisey cf 4 1 2 0 0 2 .265 Votto 1b 2 1 1 0 2 1 .362 B.Phillips 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .266 Bruce rf 4 0 1 0 0 3 .262 Ludwick lf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .209 Frazier 3b 4 0 1 2 0 1 .267 Hanigan c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .286 Arroyo p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .211 a-Negron ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 --Marshall p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Ondrusek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Cairo ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .159 Totals 32 2 6 2 5 12 Detroit 010 100 010 — 3 7 0 Cincinnati 000 200 000 — 2 6 0 a-walked for Arroyo in the 7th. b-grounded out for Villarreal in the 8th. c-flied out for Ondrusek in the 9th. LOB—Detroit 6, Cincinnati 8. 2B—Boesch (11), Heisey (7), Votto (26), Bruce (15). HR—R.Santiago (2), off Arroyo; Fielder (10), off Arroyo. DP—Detroit 1. Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Verlander 6 6 2 2 3 9 127 2.69 Villarreal W, 2-1 1 0 0 0 2 1 22 1.26 Benoit H, 15 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 2.42 Valverde S, 11-14 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 4.07 Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Arroyo 7 5 2 2 0 4 87 3.79 Marshall L, 1-3 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 14 3.63 Ondrusek 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 20 2.59 T—3:06. A—42,443 (42,319).

Nationals 4, Red Sox 2 Washington Lombardozzi lf c-T.Moore ph-lf Bernadina lf Harper rf Zimmerman 3b LaRoche 1b Morse dh Desmond ss Espinosa 2b Ankiel cf Flores c Totals

AB 3 1 0 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 31

R 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 4

H 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 5

BI 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 4

BB 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 2 1 0 2 1 2 2 0 0 2 1 13

Avg. .282 .208 .239 .282 .250 .263 .214 .262 .222 .226 .250

Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Nava lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .298 Pedroia 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .277 Ad.Gonzalez rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .270 Ortiz dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .300 Youkilis 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Middlebrooks 3b 3 1 0 0 1 1 .310 Aviles ss 4 1 1 0 0 0 .263 D.McDonald cf 1 0 0 0 1 0 .188 a-Sweeney ph-cf 1 0 1 0 1 0 .309 Shoppach c 2 0 0 0 0 2 .268 Saltalamacchia ph-c 2 0 1 2 0 0 .273 Totals 33 2 5 2 3 6 Washington 010 300 000 — 4 5 3 Boston 000 000 200 — 2 5 0 a-walked for D.McDonald in the 7th. b-singled for Shoppach in the 7th. c-struck out for Lombardozzi in the 8th. E—LaRoche (4), G.Gonzalez (1), Harper (4). LOB—Washington 1, Boston 7. 2B—Morse (3), Ankiel (9), Ortiz (19), Sweeney (17). HR—LaRoche (10), off Matsuzaka. SB—Aviles (7). DP—Boston 1. Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA G.Gonzalez W, 8-2 6 1-3 3 2 2 2 5 98 2.35

• Pirates 5, Royals 3: PITTSBURGH — Neil Walker drove in the go-ahead run with a groundout during a wacky fourth inning and Pittsburgh earned its third consecutive victory to move four games over .500 at 31-27. • White Sox 10, Astros 1: CHICAGO — Chris Sale pitched eight shutout innings to earn his fifth straight win and Adam Dunn had a grand slam and five RBIs for the Chicago White Sox. • Twins 11, Cubs 3: MINNEAPOLIS — Trevor Plouffe had a double, a homer and four RBIs and Scott Diamond pitched six scoreless innings for surging Minnesota. • Orioles 6, Phillies 4: BALTIMORE — Adam Jones hit a two-run homer in the 12th and Baltimore won its eighth straight extra-inning game. • Rays 13, Marlins 4: MIAMI — Ben Zobrist homered twice and drove in four runs to lead Tampa Bay to its third consecutive win. • Cardinals 2, Indians 0: ST. LOUIS — Kyle Lohse allowed three hits in 7 2⁄3 innings to outpitch Justin Masterson, and Carlos Beltran hit his National League-leading 17th homer for St. Louis. • Diamondbacks 8, Athletics 3: PHOENIX — Miguel Montero hit his second career grand slam and Arizona beat Oakland for the Diamondbacks’ fourth consecutive victory. • Padres 5, Brewers 2: MILWAUKEE — Ross Ohlendorf had a strong relief outing and San Diego strung together four consecutive singles in a sixthinning rally.

Stammen 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 Mic.Gonzalez H, 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 S.Burnett H, 10 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 Clippard S, 7-8 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP Matsuzaka L, 0-1 5 5 4 4 1 8 80 F.Morales 3 0 0 0 0 3 36 Aceves 1 0 0 0 0 2 19 Stammen pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. T—2:53. A—37,534 (37,067).

1.80 0.00 0.95 2.39 ERA 7.20 3.04 4.85

White Sox 10, Astros 1 Houston Altuve 2b Bixler lf Lowrie ss J.D.Martinez dh Maxwell cf Wallace 1b C.Snyder c M.Downs 3b Bogusevic rf Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 33

R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 6

BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 0 2 1 2 1 1 0 1 1 9

Avg. .325 .167 .297 .235 .222 .381 .189 .162 .223

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. De Aza cf 5 2 4 1 0 0 .310 Beckham 2b 5 2 3 3 0 0 .237 A.Dunn dh 4 1 2 5 0 1 .226 Konerko 1b 2 0 1 0 2 0 .363 Lillibridge 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .189 Rios rf 5 0 2 1 0 0 .300 Pierzynski c 5 0 0 0 0 2 .288 Al.Ramirez ss 5 1 2 0 0 0 .222 Jor.Danks lf 5 2 2 0 0 2 .429 E.Escobar 3b 3 2 1 0 1 0 .188 Totals 40 10 17 10 3 5 Houston 000 000 001 — 1 6 2 Chicago 000 051 04x — 10 17 0 E—M.Downs (2), Altuve (8). LOB—Houston 6, Chicago 10. HR—Lowrie (12), off Z.Stewart; A.Dunn (19), off R.Cruz. SB—Jor.Danks (1). Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lyles L, 1-2 4 1-3 7 5 4 3 0 83 5.40 X.Cedeno 1 1-3 3 1 1 0 2 21 4.15 D.Carpenter 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 20 5.24 R.Cruz 2-3 6 4 4 0 0 24 7.11 Lyon 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 2.28 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sale W, 8-2 8 4 0 0 0 7 101 2.05 Z.Stewart 1 2 1 1 0 2 24 5.06 T—2:44. A—22,880 (40,615).

Braves 5, Blue Jays 2 Toronto Lawrie 3b Rasmus cf Bautista rf Encarnacion 1b K.Johnson 2b Y.Escobar ss R.Davis lf McCoy lf L.Perez p Mathis c Hutchison p Y.Gomes lf Totals

AB 4 4 3 4 4 3 2 1 0 3 2 1 31

R 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

H 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

BI 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

BB 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 5

Avg. .272 .240 .230 .283 .251 .254 .250 .250 --.200 .000 .172

Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 4 1 3 1 0 0 .317 Prado 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .320 McCann c 3 1 0 0 1 2 .240 Uggla 2b 3 1 1 3 1 1 .267 Heyward rf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .245 F.Freeman 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Simmons ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .280 Constanza lf 3 1 2 0 0 1 .250 Hanson p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .048 Kimbrel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 5 8 5 2 9 Toronto 000 002 000 — 2 5 0 Atlanta 003 000 20x — 5 8 0 LOB—Toronto 3, Atlanta 5. 2B—Bourn (13). HR—Bautista (17), off Hanson; Uggla (11), off Hutchison; Simmons (1), off Hutchison. SB—Bourn (16). Toronto Hutchison L, 5-3 L.Perez Atlanta Hanson W, 7-4

IP 6 1-3 1 2-3 IP 8

H 7 1 H 5

R 5 0 R 2

ER BB SO NP ERA 5 1 7 103 4.66 0 1 2 24 3.07 ER BB SO NP ERA 2 1 4 111 3.55

Kimbrel S, 18-19 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 1.57 T—2:34. A—32,819 (49,586).

Cardinals 2, Indians 0 Cleveland Choo rf A.Cabrera ss Kipnis 2b C.Santana c Brantley cf Damon lf Kotchman 1b Chisenhall 3b Masterson p a-Duncan ph Accardo p Totals

AB 4 4 4 3 4 3 2 3 2 1 0 30

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

H 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

BI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

BB 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 4

Avg. .269 .297 .277 .229 .288 .182 .219 .212 .000 .198 ---

St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Furcal ss 3 0 0 1 0 1 .308 Beltran rf 4 1 3 1 0 0 .284 Y.Molina c 3 0 1 0 1 0 .337 Craig lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .361 Ma.Adams 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .271 Freese 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .261 Descalso 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .229 S.Robinson cf 3 1 1 0 0 1 .277 Lohse p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .083 Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Chambers ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .250 Motte p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 28 2 7 2 1 6 Cleveland 000 000 000 — 0 3 0 St. Louis 001 000 01x — 2 7 1 a-grounded out for Masterson in the 8th. b-sacrificed for Rzepczynski in the 8th. E—Freese (4). LOB—Cleveland 5, St. Louis 5. 2B—Beltran (7), Descalso (3), S.Robinson (5). HR—Beltran (17), off Masterson. Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Masterson L, 2-6 7 5 1 1 0 6 89 4.76 Accardo 1 2 1 1 1 0 15 2.13 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lohse W, 6-1 7 2-3 3 0 0 2 4 105 2.90 Rzepczynski H, 7 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 4.98 Motte S, 11-14 1 0 0 0 0 0 18 2.81 T—2:14. A—41,694 (43,975).

Twins 11, Cubs 3 Chicago Re.Johnson lf S.Castro ss a-Cardenas ph-2b DeJesus rf K.Hill c A.Soriano dh Je.Baker 1b-rf Mather cf Clevenger c-1b Barney 2b-ss I.Stewart 3b Totals

AB 5 3 2 3 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 38

R 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 3

H 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 2 2 11

BI 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 7

Avg. .276 .302 .161 .273 .200 .276 .250 .265 .278 .269 .208

Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 5 2 2 1 0 0 .288 Revere rf 5 1 2 1 0 0 .330 Mauer c 4 1 3 2 0 0 .308 Butera c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .243 Willingham lf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .294 Mastroianni lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .211 Morneau 1b 2 2 2 0 2 0 .247 Parmelee 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .182 Doumit dh 5 1 1 1 0 0 .258 Plouffe 3b 4 2 2 4 0 0 .208 Dozier ss 4 0 1 1 0 0 .244 J.Carroll 2b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .240 Totals 38 11 16 11 4 2 Chicago 000 000 120 — 3 11 0 Minnesota 020 612 00x — 11 16 0 a-grounded out for S.Castro in the 7th. LOB—Chicago 8, Minnesota 7. 2B—Re.Johnson (4), Span (15), Mauer (13), Doumit (7), Plouffe (6). HR—A.Soriano (12), off Gray; Plouffe (9), off C.Coleman. DP—Chicago 1. Chicago Samardzija L, 5-4 C.Coleman Asencio

IP 3 2-3 1 2-3 1 2-3

H 9 6 0

R 8 3 0

ER BB SO NP 8 1 1 78 3 2 1 56 0 1 0 24

ERA 3.96 4.30 0.00

Corpas 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP Diamond W, 5-1 6 7 0 0 0 5 89 Gray 2 3 3 3 0 1 28 Manship 1 1 0 0 0 1 15 T—3:00. A—39,309 (39,500).

0.00 ERA 1.61 5.18 2.70

Pirates 5, Royals 3 Kansas City AB R A.Gordon lf 3 1 Y.Betancourt 2b 5 1 Butler 1b 5 0 Moustakas 3b 4 0 Francoeur cf 4 0 Hosmer rf 4 1 B.Pena c 4 0 A.Escobar ss 4 0 Mazzaro p 2 0 K.Herrera p 0 0 b-C.Robinson ph 1 0 Crow p 0 0 L.Coleman p 0 0 c-Giavotella ph 1 0 G.Holland p 0 0 Totals 37 3

H 0 1 2 1 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

BI 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

BB 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 4

Avg. .240 .270 .294 .277 .268 .226 .255 .282 .500 --.000 ----.219 ---

Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Presley lf 5 0 2 1 0 0 .234 Walker 2b 3 0 0 1 1 2 .275 A.McCutchen cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .320 G.Jones 1b 3 0 0 1 0 0 .243 Resop p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Slaten p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --McGehee 1b 1 0 1 0 0 0 .209 P.Alvarez 3b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .200 Tabata rf 3 1 0 0 0 0 .222 Barajas c 3 1 2 0 1 0 .246 Barmes ss 4 1 1 1 0 1 .195 Ja.McDonald p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .125 a-Hague ph-1b 2 1 0 0 0 0 .216 J.Hughes p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 d-Mercer ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .111 Hanrahan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 30 5 6 4 6 7 Kansas City 002 100 000 — 3 9 1 Pittsburgh 000 500 00x — 5 6 1 a-reached on error for Ja.McDonald in the 4th. b-flied out for K.Herrera in the 6th. c-struck out for L.Coleman in the 8th. d-walked for J.Hughes in the 8th. E—B.Pena (2), Resop (2). LOB—Kansas City 9, Pittsburgh 8. 2B—Hosmer 2 (11), McGehee (6). HR— Y.Betancourt (3), off Ja.McDonald. SB—A.Gordon (2), Butler (1), Presley 2 (5), Walker (5). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP Mazzaro L, 2-1 3 3 4 3 4 4 79 K.Herrera 2 2 1 0 1 0 37 Crow 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 L.Coleman 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 G.Holland 1 0 0 0 1 0 13 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP Ja.McDonald 4 5 3 3 2 2 76 Resop 1 3 0 0 0 0 19 Slaten H, 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 8 Hughes W, 2-0 H, 5 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 25 Hanrahan S, 17-19 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 Resop pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Mazzaro pitched to 4 batters in the 4th. T—3:14. A—39,312 (38,362).

ERA 3.60 3.13 3.08 3.15 4.50 ERA 2.39 3.38 0.00 1.78 2.63

Rays 13, Marlins 4 Tampa Bay AB Rhymes 3b 4 C.Ramos p 0 De.Jennings lf-cf 5 Joyce rf 5 B.Upton cf 4 b-Matsui ph-lf 1 C.Pena 1b 2 c-Sutton ph-1b 1 Zobrist 2b 3 E.Johnson ss 5 J.Molina c 4 M.Moore p 2 W.Davis p 1 2-S.Rodriguez pr-3b 1 Totals 38

R 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 0 4 2 2 0 0 0 13

H 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 3 4 2 0 1 0 14

BI 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 3 1 0 0 12

BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 6

SO 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 3

Avg. .247 --.265 .283 .277 .160 .201 .243 .218 .268 .196 .000 1.000 .217

Miami AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Reyes ss 4 1 1 0 1 2 .280 Infante 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .302 H.Ramirez 3b 3 0 1 0 0 2 .262 1-Do.Murphy pr-3b 1 1 0 0 0 0 .133 Stanton rf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .295 Ruggiano cf 3 1 2 3 1 0 .389 Kearns 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .339 D.Solano lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .444 J.Buck c 4 0 0 0 0 2 .162 Zambrano p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .174 Gaudin p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 a-Coghlan ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .155 S.Rosario p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Cishek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 d-Hayes ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .276 Totals 35 4 8 4 2 11 Tampa Bay 052 020 031 — 13 14 0 Miami 000 004 000 — 4 8 0 a-grounded out for Gaudin in the 7th. b-doubled for B.Upton in the 9th. c-grounded out for C.Pena in the 9th. d-struck out for Cishek in the 9th. 1-ran for H.Ramirez in the 6th. 2-ran for W.Davis in the 8th. LOB—Tampa Bay 5, Miami 6. 2B—Matsui (1), J.Molina (5), Stanton (17), Ruggiano (3). HR—Zobrist (7), off Zambrano; Zobrist (8), off Gaudin; Ruggiano (2), off M.Moore. DP—Tampa Bay 1; Miami 2. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA M.Moore W, 3-5 6 5 4 4 2 9 102 4.59 W.Davis 1 1 0 0 0 0 23 2.20 C.Ramos 2 2 0 0 0 2 22 1.38 Miami IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Zambrano L, 4-4 2 1-3 5 7 7 3 1 57 3.55 Gaudin 4 2-3 3 2 2 0 2 55 4.62 S.Rosario 0 4 3 3 0 0 13 16.20 Choate 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 0.49 Cishek 1 2 1 1 2 0 27 2.10 S.Rosario pitched to 4 batters in the 8th. T—3:11. A—30,963 (37,442).

Yankees 4, Mets 2 New York (N) Nieuwenhuis rf a-Hairston ph-rf b-Valdespin ph A.Torres cf D.Wright 3b Duda dh Dan.Murphy 2b I.Davis 1b Bay lf Thole c Quintanilla ss Totals

AB 2 1 1 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 34

R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2

H 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 2 8

BI 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2

BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3

SO 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 6

Avg. .289 .280 .133 .209 .355 .263 .281 .162 .211 .274 .344

New York (A) AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jeter ss 3 1 1 0 1 2 .314 Granderson cf 3 2 1 1 1 0 .247 Al.Rodriguez dh 4 0 1 1 0 1 .277 Cano 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .293 Teixeira 1b 2 1 1 2 1 0 .248 Ibanez lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .256 Wise lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .125 Swisher rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .253 Er.Chavez 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Martin c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .208 Totals 28 4 6 4 3 7 New York (N) 001 001 000 — 2 8 0 New York (A) 100 002 01x — 4 6 0 a-singled for Nieuwenhuis in the 7th. b-flied out for Hairston in the 9th. LOB—New York (N) 8, New York (A) 4. 2B—Nieuwenhuis (9). HR—Quintanilla (1), off P.Hughes; D.Wright (8), off P.Hughes; Teixeira (11), off Gee; Granderson (18), off Parnell. SB—Hairston (3). DP—New York (N) 2. New York (N) IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gee L, 4-4 7 5 3 3 3 5 109 4.42 Parnell 1 1 1 1 0 2 12 3.04 New York (A) IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA P.Hughes W, 6-5 6 1-3 6 2 2 2 6 108 4.76 Logan H, 6 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 2.75 Wade H, 7 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 14 2.77 Rapada H, 3 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 4.11 R.Soriano S, 9-9 1 1 0 0 1 0 20 1.71 T—2:48. A—48,575 (50,291).

Dodgers 8, Mariners 3 Los Angeles D.Gordon ss E.Herrera 3b J.Rivera lf Coffey p Ethier dh-rf

AB 5 5 4 0 4

R 2 1 1 0 1

H 2 2 1 0 0

BI 0 1 1 0 0

BB 0 0 0 0 1

SO 0 2 0 0 1

Avg. .229 .286 .238 --.294

Hairston Jr. 2b Loney 1b A.Ellis c Gwynn Jr. cf Castellanos rf-lf Totals

4 3 4 4 4 37

2 3 0 1 0 2 1 2 0 1 8 14

5 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 8 2 5

.366 .256 .306 .272 .143

Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. I.Suzuki rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .267 Figgins lf 3 0 0 0 0 3 .175 a-Carp ph-lf 0 0 0 0 1 0 .163 J.Montero dh 3 0 1 0 0 1 .263 Smoak 1b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .225 Seager 2b 2 1 0 0 2 1 .272 Olivo c 4 1 1 3 0 1 .203 M.Saunders cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .272 Liddi 3b 4 0 0 0 0 3 .231 Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 0 2 .160 Totals 30 3 4 3 4 14 Los Angeles 302 000 012 — 8 14 0 Seattle 000 300 000 — 3 4 0 a-walked for Figgins in the 8th. LOB—Los Angeles 5, Seattle 5. 2B—Hairston Jr. 2 (8), J.Montero (11). HR—Hairston Jr. (2), off Vargas; Olivo (5), off Kershaw. SB—D.Gordon 2 (16), E.Herrera (3), Gwynn Jr. (9). DP—Seattle 3. Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kershaw W, 5-3 7 4 3 3 2 12 115 2.65 Belisario H, 6 1 0 0 0 1 1 16 1.10 Coffey 1 0 0 0 1 1 19 5.84 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vargas L, 7-5 6 9 5 5 1 3 100 3.90 Iwakuma 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 19 4.87 Luetge 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.00 Kelley 2-3 3 2 2 1 1 20 4.70 Pryor 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 11 1.80 T—3:09. A—30,287 (47,860).

Diamondbacks 8, Athletics 3 Oakland J.Weeks 2b Crisp cf Reddick rf S.Smith lf Inge 3b Moss 1b J.Miller p a-J.Gomes ph Blevins p K.Suzuki c Pennington ss J.Parker p Donaldson 1b Totals

AB 5 4 5 3 4 2 0 0 0 4 4 1 2 34

R 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3

H 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 10

BI 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

BB 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 1 0 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 9

Avg. .218 .173 .271 .255 .216 .167 --.212 --.219 .212 .000 .144

Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. G.Parra cf 3 1 1 0 1 0 .274 Bloomquist ss 5 2 2 0 0 0 .298 J.Upton rf 3 2 1 1 2 1 .250 Kubel lf 4 1 3 2 1 0 .300 Goldschmidt 1b 4 0 1 1 1 3 .292 M.Montero c 5 1 1 4 0 1 .249 A.Hill 2b 3 0 2 0 1 0 .271 J.Bell 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .188 Cahill p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .077 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 b-R.Roberts ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .249 D.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 34 8 12 8 7 6 Oakland 010 000 011 — 3 10 1 Arizona 100 050 02x — 8 12 0 a-hit a sacrifice fly for J.Miller in the 8th. b-singled for Ziegler in the 8th. E—J.Weeks (6). LOB—Oakland 9, Arizona 10. 2B—J.Weeks (8), K.Suzuki (11), Pennington (12), J.Upton (8), A.Hill 2 (12). HR—M.Montero (4), off J.Parker. SB—S.Smith (2), Bloomquist (5). DP—Arizona 1. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Parker L, 2-3 5 8 6 6 5 4 102 3.19 J.Miller 2 1 0 0 1 2 38 1.59 Blevins 1 3 2 2 1 0 24 2.39 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cahill W, 4-5 7 1-3 7 2 2 3 7 107 3.36 Ziegler 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 8 1.93 D.Hernandez 1 2 1 1 0 2 18 3.20 T—2:55. A—28,061 (48,633).

NL Boxscore Padres 5, Brewers 2 San Diego Venable rf Forsythe 2b Kotsay lf b-Denorfia ph-lf Headley 3b Alonso 1b Maybin cf Jo.Baker c E.Cabrera ss Cashner p Ohlendorf p Gregerson p Thatcher p Thayer p Street p Totals

AB 4 5 3 2 4 4 4 4 4 1 2 1 0 0 0 38

R 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

H 1 2 0 1 3 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 13

BI 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

BB 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 2 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 10

Avg. .268 .409 .261 .258 .269 .261 .221 .227 .274 .000 .000 .000 -------

Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Hart 1b 5 0 0 0 0 3 .258 Aoki rf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .297 Braun lf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .306 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 2 0 1 0 .259 R.Weeks 2b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .159 Ransom ss 2 1 0 0 2 2 .226 Morgan cf 3 0 1 0 0 2 .230 M.Maldonado c 2 0 1 1 1 0 .233 c-Kottaras ph-c 1 0 0 0 0 1 .241 Fiers p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Conrad ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .081 M.Parra p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 d-Green ph 0 0 0 0 0 0 .245 e-C.Gomez ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .258 Fr.Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 33 2 8 2 4 11 San Diego 001 012 100 — 5 13 0 Milwaukee 100 100 000 — 2 8 0 a-struck out for Fiers in the 6th. b-doubled for Kotsay in the 7th. c-struck out for M.Maldonado in the 8th. d-was announced for M.Parra in the 8th. e-singled for Green in the 8th. LOB—San Diego 8, Milwaukee 11. 2B—Venable (13), Denorfia (10), Ar.Ramirez (17), R.Weeks (9). SB—E.Cabrera (5), Aoki (4). DP—Milwaukee 2. San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP Cashner 2 1-3 2 1 1 2 5 47 Ohlendorf W, 1-0 4 1-3 5 1 1 2 4 67 Gregerson H, 7 1 0 0 0 0 2 21 Thatcher 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Thayer H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 Street S, 5-5 1 0 0 0 0 0 13 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP Fiers L, 1-2 6 10 4 4 1 6 91 M.Parra 2 2 1 1 1 2 32 Fr.Rodriguez 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 Thatcher pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:16. A—41,604 (41,900).

ERA 3.81 3.38 4.15 2.20 6.00 0.77 ERA 4.50 4.30 4.50

Leaders Through Saturday’s Games AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Konerko, Chicago, .363; Hamilton, Texas, .338; Trumbo, Los Angeles, .321; MiCabrera, Detroit, .317; Fielder, Detroit, .316; Jeter, New York, .314; De Aza, Chicago, .310. RUNS—Kinsler, Texas, 46; De Aza, Chicago, 43; Granderson, New York, 42; Hamilton, Texas, 42; Kipnis, Cleveland, 42; Cano, New York, 40; AdJones, Baltimore, 40. RBI—Hamilton, Texas, 59; MiCabrera, Detroit, 51; ADunn, Chicago, 45; Bautista, Toronto, 43; Encarnacion, Toronto, 43; Willingham, Minnesota, 41; Fielder, Detroit, 39. HITS—MiCabrera, Detroit, 76; Jeter, New York, 76; Hamilton, Texas, 74; Fielder, Detroit, 71; AdJones, Baltimore, 71; De Aza, Chicago, 70; Konerko, Chicago, 70. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—MeCabrera, San Francisco, .364; Votto, Cincinnati, .362; DWright, New York, .355; YMolina, St. Louis, .337; Altuve, Houston, .325; Pagan, San Francisco, .320; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, .320; CGonzalez, Colorado, .320; Prado, Atlanta, .320. RUNS—CGonzalez, Colorado, 46; MeCabrera, San Francisco, 44; Pence, Philadelphia, 43; Uggla, Atlanta, 43; Bourn, Atlanta, 42; Furcal, St. Louis, 41; DWright, New York, 40. RBI—Ethier, Los Angeles, 48; CGonzalez, Colorado, 46; Beltran, St. Louis, 45; Stanton, Miami, 42; Uggla, Atlanta, 41; Freese, St. Louis, 40; LaRoche, Washington, 40. HITS—MeCabrera, San Francisco, 87; Bourn, Atlanta, 80; Altuve, Houston, 76; Pagan, San Francisco, 74; SCastro, Chicago, 73; Furcal, St. Louis, 73; Votto, Cincinnati, 72; DWright, New York, 72.


SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Wilson passes Rahal for IndyCar victory in Texas

Tamika Moore / The Associated Press via The Birmingham News

Tom Lehman celebrates his birdie on the ninth hole to take the lead during the third round of the Champions Tour’s Regions Tradition Saturday at Shoal Creek in Birmingham, Ala.

Lehman leads large group at Tradition The Associated Press BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tom Lehman knows how vulnerable a two-stroke lead can be going into the final round of the Regions Tradition. Lehman built that margin over Peter Senior and Jeff Sluman after shooting a 4-under 68 on Saturday in the third round of the Regions Tradition, a Champions Tour major. Lehman trailed Mark Calcavecchia by two shots entering Sunday a year ago at Shoal Creek and wound up beating Senior in a playoff. “It’s the same situation as last year,” Lehman said. “A bunched-up field. A lot of guys close. It’s a good position to be in.” Just not necessarily a secure one. Lehman had a 10-under 206 total at Shoal Creek. Senior shot 66, and Sluman 70 on an overcast, gusty and sometimes drizzly day. Lehman said he’ll stick to a similar plan on the final day. “If I go play my game and play the way I’ve been playing, it’s going to take a good round to catch me,” he said. “But likewise, if I don’t, if I slip up some, there’s a lot of guys close by. Two shots is nice, but it’s not over by any means, not even close.” Lehman opened with consecutive rounds of 69. His only bogey Saturday came on the 16th and he described that as poor luck not poor play. “It was a beautiful putt that missed. Looked like it couldn’t miss, but did,” he said. Bill Glasson held the lead for all but the tournament’s first hole coming into the day, but fell three shots back with a 74. He was tied with Russ Cochran, Brad Bryant and Fred Funk. Bryant and Funk shot 71, and Cochran had a 72. Glasson had a double bogey on the par-5 11th hole, when he got stuck on the lip of a bunker, and he also bogeyed No. 15. He remains in contention for his first win since the PGA Tour’s 1997 Las Vegas Invitational. “It was a tough day,” Glasson said. “I was too amped-up early and just kind of hit over every green. My short game’s so bad. I made a double and two bogeys with wedges. “I’m three back. Somebody else will have to sleep on the lead and maybe I’ll get back to the way I played the first couple of days.” With stormy weather expected Sunday, the final round is scheduled for an early two-tee start. Then maybe another Lehman-Senior showdown. Senior, from Australia, lost to Lehman on the second hole of a playoff last year when his 5foot par putt lipped out.

Distraction Continued from D1 But don’t take my word for it. I asked a couple of Central Oregon golfers who really know what playing under pressure is all about. “I believe that golf is a game of complete mental concentration, and when that concentration is broken or your mind drifts to a sound in the background, your body does not react the way that it should,” says Bend’s Andrew Vijarro, who just turned professional after last week helping to lead the University of Oregon to the semifinals of the Division I Men’s Golf Championships. “For example, if my swing thought is to keep turning my hips throughout the swing and a camera goes off, I start thinking about the camera rather than turning my hips,” Vijarro adds. “It becomes a completely lost swing.” And top-flight golfers are not big fans of lost golf swings. To play golf at a high level takes incredible concentration. You want to know the difference between a 10-handicap and an elite golfer? It is more than just physical talent.

GOLF ROUNDUP Senior shot a 30 on the first nine holes, with four birdies plus an eagle on the par-4 seventh. His first misstep was a bogey on No. 12 that cost him a share of the lead with Lehman and Glasson at the time. “At the outset, I needed to shoot around this score that I shot, so I was pretty happy with it,” Senior said. “When I was 6 under after seven, I sort of looked to get a little bit greedy. But a couple more would have been nice.” The last Champions Tour player to lose in a playoff and then win the same tournament the next year was Nick Price in the 2010 Principal Charity Classic. In other events on Saturday: Love, O’Hern, Merrick top St. Jude leaderboard MEMPHIS, Tenn. — U.S. Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III shot his third straight 2-under 68 to join Nick O’Hern and John Merrick atop the leaderboard at the windy St. Jude Classic. Love only committed to play in Memphis recently, waiting to make sure he was healthy enough to use this event as a final tuneup for the U.S. Open after qualifying Monday in Columbus, Ohio. Love, who hasn’t won since 2008, had three birdies and only one bogey Saturday to match O’Hern and Merrick at 6-under 204. O’Hern had a 67, and Merrick shot 69. Ji up one over Webb at LPGA Championship PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Eun-Hee Ji shot a 3under 69 to take a one-shot lead over Karrie Webb after the third round of the LPGA Championship. Ji was 4 under at Locust Hill. Webb had a 68, matching Ji for the best round of the tournament. Westwood takes Nordea Masters title BRO, Sweden — England’s Lee Westwood won the Nordea Masters for the third time for his 22nd European Tour title, closing with a 3-under 69 for a five-stroke victory. The thirdranked Westwood finished at 19-under 269 at Bro Hof Slott. He also won the event in 1996 and 2000. England’s Ross Fisher was second after a 71. Britain, Ireland close in on U.S. NAIRN, Scotland — Britain and Ireland moved within a point of the United States in the Curtis Cup , taking 2 1⁄2 of three points in the afternoon fourball matches. The United States led 6 1⁄2-5 1⁄2 entering the eight singles matches today. The United States has won the biennial amateur competition the last seven times and leads the series 27-6-3.

Scratch golfers almost never waste a stroke, grinding away through a round making constant calculations in their heads on how to save a swing here or a putt there. Put gobs of money on the line, and not surprisingly, competitive golfers become even more finely tuned. Most top-level golfers are so in-sync with their golf swings that the slightest twitch can be the difference between a shot for birdie and an attempted escape job from the woods. “Golf deals with a lot of small and big muscles, and when you flinch or are distracted these small muscles do not react the way that you want them to,” Vijarro says. “In fact they do the opposite (of what you want them to), leading to a bad swing and a distracted player.” Still, Chadd Cocco, another fledgling golf pro from Bend who has played three Nationwide Tour events in his career, calls distractions “somewhat situational.” Cocco recalls reading that legendary Ben Hogan once had a train horn blow in his backswing, and Hogan didn’t even flinch. “Obviously it’s different for everyone, but for me personally when I’m jacked up and playing well I feel like I am

very hard to distract,” says Cocco, a 27-year-old who played collegiate golf at Saint Mary’s in Moraga, Calif. “When things are not going so well it’s very easy to become irritated and distracted.” Distractions during tournaments figure to be an ongoing issue on the PGA Tour, which last year began allowing fans to carry cell phones on the course. The only caveat is that those fans are not allowed to take pictures during competition and can only take calls in designated areas. As Mickelson can attest, that is not so easy to control. Of course, Mickelson was in the midst of a brutal round of 79, perhaps proving Cocco’s point. But whether playing with a foursome of friends or attending the upcoming U.S. Open, it’s best to be aware of those around you. “Overall golf is a gentleman’s game and part of playing is respect for your playing partners, which means being quiet when they are about to hit, including the crowd,” says Cocco. After all, there is so much that can go wrong with a golf swing, why add distraction? This game is hard enough. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com

The Associated Press FORT WORTH, Texas — Justin Wilson was the surprise winner Saturday night at Texas Motor Speedway, where Graham Rahal wrecked while leading a topsy-turvy race that took out several contenders. Rahal took control of the race with a strong pass of Ryan Briscoe 28 laps from the finish. He had pulled away from the field and seemed headed to his first victory since 2008, but his car drifted high into the wall as he exited the fourth turn. Rahal bounced back onto the track and kept going, albeit slower, and Wilson charged past him with two laps remaining. The Englishman pulled away from Rahal to snap a 46-race winless streak, dating to Watkins Glen in 2009. “That’s just fantastic,” Wilson said. “I just can’t believe we managed to pull this off. I saw people sliding around, and knew I just had to hit my marks. I saw (Rahal) sliding more and more every lap. I didn’t think it was much chance, but then when I saw him hit the way, I thought ‘OK, it was time to go.’ “It was four-wheel drifting all the way into three, all the way out of four. You were having to hang on out there.” A disappointed Rahal settled for second, his best finish of the season and best finish ever at Texas. Honda drivers finished first and second. “I just messed up, honestly. There’s not much else to say,” Rahal said. “I didn’t expect it, honestly.” Briscoe was third for Chevrolet. The race took several turns, beginning when Scott Dixon wrecked late after leading 133 of the 228 laps. It set up a restart with points leader Will Power and Penske Racing teammate Briscoe lined up first and second with Tony Kanaan behind in third. Kanaan tried to go low and around Power to make it three-wide, but Power blocked him and the contact broke Kanaan’s front wing. He was furious and demanded IndyCar penalize Power, and a drive-thru penalty was indeed issued. “I had Briscoe on the outside and Tony took me by surprise,” Power said. “I feel bad for him. I ruined his day because he had to come in and change the front wing,

Ralph Lauer / The Associated Press

Fans look on as Justin Wilson spins out while celebrating his win in the IZOD IndyCar Firestone 550 at Texas Motor Speedway, Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas.

and we ruined our own day by getting the penalty.” That sequence took Power and Kanaan out of contention: Power went from first to eighth on the penalty and finished eighth, Kanaan wound up 11th. Kanaan thought Power’s block was dangerous, particularly at a track where nerves were already frayed. “Will just put the biggest block ever on the oval, and when we talk about safety, man,” Kanaan said. “That move right there to me is unacceptable. I talked to him, I said ‘Man, we talk about safety. I could have put you in the wall and hurt yourself.’ ” The race was the first on a high-banked oval for IndyCar since Dan Wheldon’s death in a 15-car accident at Las Vegas in October. Drivers were skittish about racing at Texas, and IndyCar worked hard on a formula to break up the pack racing that was cited as a contributing factor in Wheldon’s death. It worked, there was no pack racing, and despite the car being difficult to handle, the race featured passing and an exciting finish. Drivers had been split after qualifying about the downforce level set by IndyCar, with half the field embracing it because it made the cars so difficult to drive and half the drivers opposed while warning it could potentially make Saturday night a boring race. There seemed to be only praise, though, after the race. “I have to say, that’s the best racing I’ve ever had on an oval,” said Power, who broke his back in the Las Vegas accident. “The car was moving around, and that’s the sort of racing we need at places like this.”

Also on Saturday: Logano sets track record at Pocono Raceway LONG POND, Pa. — Joey Logano turned a lap of 179.598 mph to set the track record during qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Pocono Raceway. Logano wasn’t alone in topping the mark. There were 36 drivers who posted a speed faster than the 172.533 mph set by Kasey Kahne on June 11, 2004. Carl Edwards joins Logano on the front row for today’s 400-mile race. Paul Menard, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin round out the top five. Drivers have raved about a repave on the 2½-mile track that led to the increased speeds. Logano won his first pole of the season. He also had the fastest lap in Friday’s practice. Vettel wins pole at Canadian GP in Montreal MONTREAL — Sebastian Vettel has earned pole position for Formula One’s Canadian Grand Prix. It’s the second straight year Vettel had the fastest qualifying time at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Lewis Hamilton also will be in the front row for today’s race on the 2.71-mile course located on the Ile Notre Dame in Montreal. Fernando Alonso was third in qualifying on a clear and sunny day Saturday. Vettel started on the pole last year and led almost all of the 2011 race, which was delayed repeatedly by downpours.

Summer Shootout Marble Tournament Des Chutes Historical Museum

Saturday June 16 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Registration $10.00 per person early bird, $15.00 after June 12.

Two categories: Children 7 to 11, Grand Prize is a bicycle from Hutch’s, Young at Heart 12 years and up, Grand prize is an Xbox More great prizes from Sharc Water Park, Sun Mountain Fun Center, the Art Station, the Old Mill District and Wabi Sabi. No need to know how to play, tournament starts with lessons and practice time. Each participant receives a t-shirt and goody bag.

Registration forms available at www.DeschutesHistory.org, or by calling 541.389.1813


D6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

H O R S E R ACING: BELMONT STAKES

Union Rags nips Paynter By Beth Harris The Associated Press

Michel Euler / The Associated Press

Maria Sharapova holds the trophy after winning the women’s final match against Sara Errani at the French Open in Paris, Saturday. Sharapova won in two sets 6-3, 6-2.

Sharapova takes French Open title By Eddie Pells The Associated Press

PARIS — The picture she posed for at the beginning foreshadowed a mismatch in the making — 6-foot-2 Maria Sharapova standing at the net, towering over an opponent nearly 10 inches smaller than her. The pictures that were snapped at the end told a different story — Sharapova down on her knees after a tougherthan-expected win, head buried in her hands, celebrating after completing a comeback three years in the making and cementing her name among the greatest in tennis. The Russian star won the French Open on Saturday, defeating her tiny Italian opponent, Sara Errani, 6-3, 6-2 in the final at Roland Garros to complete the career Grand Slam. “It’s been such a journey for me to get to this stage,” Sharapova said. “There are so many people to thank, but most importantly, it’s my wonderful team that keeps me together.” Second-seeded Sharapova, who was guaranteed of moving to No. 1 in the world regardless of the result, jumped to a quick 4-0 lead against the 21st-seeded Errani, who was in her first Grand Slam final. But Errani battled back on a cool, blustery day in Paris, turning what had the makings of a blowout into an 89-minute endurance contest, filled with long rallies that forced Sharapova to reach back and find another gear. Eventually, Sharapova’s bigger serve and bigger groundstrokes wore down Errani, who at 5-foot-4½ stands 9½ inches shorter than her opponent. “She won many points with her serve or in the first two or three shots,” Errani said. “It was difficult. I couldn’t play long points like I wanted to play.”

Cowboy Continued from D1 In late April, Radabaugh placed third in the average in the bulldogging at the Lakeside Rodeo in Lakeside, Calif., winning $500. He added another $411 on Thursday with a seventhplace finish during slack competition in the first go-round of steer wrestling at the Sisters Rodeo. “I plan on making a run that brings me home some money,” Radabaugh says about today’s final performance at the Sisters Rodeo. A three-time Oregon High School Rodeo Association state champion in bulldogging, Radabaugh is no stranger to the rodeo scene. Growing up on a ranch in Prineville, he began competing as a young boy in Central Oregon Peewee Rodeo events and even rode in the Sisters Rodeo when he was “12 or 13” in a Mini Buckers event on small bulls. “I was out on the (horse) range as soon as I could ride,” recalls Radabaugh, who credits his father, former PRCA saddle bronc rider Christian Radabaugh Sr., with introducing him to the sport. But it was not until high school that the younger Radabaugh says he fell in love with steer wrestling. “(Bulldogging) fit more with me,” says Radabaugh, who at 6 feet, 185 pounds is built like a classic steer wrestler. “It was natural.” So much so that he earned a full-ride scholarship to UNLV

TENNIS When Errani netted a short backhand on the third match point, Sharapova dropped gingerly to her knees and put her head in her hands, then reached back and looked heavenward — a long, hard road back to the top finally capped with the only major title that had eluded her. “If this was my only one, it would be just as special as it is winning my fourth,” she said. Sharapova won the trophy on the red clay of Roland Garros, about three years after dropping as low as 126th in the rankings after shoulder surgery that threatened her career. She rededicated herself to the game and made a special effort to improve on clay, the surface on which she moved to 18-1 in matches this year. She added this year’s French Open title to championships at Wimbledon in 2004, the U.S. Open in 2006 and the Australian Open in 2008 to become only the 10th woman to win all four major tournaments, joining players such as Chris Evert, Martina Navratilova, Serena Williams and Billie Jean King. It was Sharapova’s 27th overall career title. She’ll be back at No. 1 in the WTA rankings Monday for the first time since June 2008. Back in 2004, Sharapova was 17, just becoming a name on the tennis scene when she swept into Roland Garros and made a surprise trip to the quarterfinals. A preview of things to come: A month later, she won Wimbledon. “It took me many years to get to this stage,” she said. “Eight years ago, it was my first breakthrough Grand Slam. I made it to the quarterfinals, and eight years from that day, I’m here on this stage. I’m so happy to share this moment.”

for steer wrestling and team roping. “He’s been a big asset to the team,” UNLV rodeo coach Ric Griffith says about Radabaugh, who won the 2010 West Coast Regional Final bulldogging championship and in 2011 advanced to the College National Finals Rodeo, also in steer wrestling. “Very few students really have the drive that he does.” A full-time history major, Radabaugh manages to balance a life that includes sixhour team practices twice a week, hour-long daily workouts, and year-round rodeo competitions. He also runs a tight schedule in the summer months, working on his family’s ranch during the week and competing on weekends, often squeezing two or three rodeos in over Friday, Saturday and Sunday. “I’m a country boy,” Radabaugh says. “Every day I’m not out at a rodeo, I’m on the ranch.” This week is no different. Radabaugh competed in the slack at the Sisters Rodeo on Thursday, made the trip to the Eastern Oregon Livestock Show rodeo in Union on Friday, headed to the Alder Creek Pioneer Association Rodeo in Bickleton, Wash., on Saturday, and is back in Sisters today for what he says is one of his favorite rodeos of the summer. “It’s one of those legendary rodeos that you wish you could wear the belt buckle,” Radabaugh says. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, egross@bendbulletin.com.

NEW YORK — Union Rags picked up right where I’ll Have Another left off, coming from behind to catch a Bob Baffert-trained horse at the finish in a Triple Crown race. In Saturday’s Belmont Stakes, it was another photo finish decided by a neck. Just like the Preakness. The 3-year-old bay colt barreled through a slim opening on the rail to edge Paynter, dealing Baffert, jockey Mike Smith and owner Ahmed Zayat a third loss in this year’s Triple Crown series. “We needed every bit of the mile and a half,” winning trainer Michael Matz said. I’ll Have Another won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness with stirring stretch drives over Baffert’s Bodemeister. But the champion stunned the racing world Friday when he was scratched from the Belmont and retired due to a tendon injury, relinquishing a shot at the first Triple Crown sweep since 1978 and only the 12th ever. His absence opened up the race for Union Rags, who finished a troubled seventh in the Derby after a bumpy start. Union Rags skipped the Preakness and because of the Derby problems switched jockeys for the Belmont — from Julien Leparoux to John Velazquez, who picked up his second Belmont victory; he won in 2007 with filly Rags to Riches. “I have to give it to the horse. He did it all for me. He just worked so unbelievable and I was just hoping he could put that work into today’s race and he did,” said Velazquez, who will enter racing’s Hall of Fame in August. “I was very proud of him.” A crowd of 85,811, cheered as Paynter and Union Rags furiously battled down the stretch, with Union Rags barely catching the front-runner in the second straight photo finish to decide a Triple Crown race this year. “Is there a Triple Crown for seconds?” Baffert said. “I really felt like I was going to win the Belmont. It was snatched away again.” Zayat was just as bummed, calling it “a heartbreaking defeat.” “He ran his guts out,” he said, referring to Paynter, who was making just his fourth career start. “I’m very disappointed we opened the rail for (Union Rags).” Jockey Mike Smith took the blame. “I’m an old veteran, you know,” he said.

David J. Phillip / The Associated Press

Jockey John Velazquez rides Union Rags, right, to victory over Paynter, with jockey Mike Smith, in the Belmont Stakes in Elmont, N.Y., Saturday.

“They’re not supposed to get through on the fence on me, and he did. I dropped the ball. My fault.” Union Rags was along the inside in the middle of the pack until it was time to make a move for the lead, and that’s when Velazquez guided him to the inside of the front-running Paynter. Turning for home, Union Rags was full of run, but needed an opening. Velazquez had no room to swing outside, so he focused on finding a hole along the rail. Suddenly, a sliver appeared when Paynter slid over just enough to let Union Rags through in the final sixteenth of a mile. And then it was a charge to the finish line. They raced head-to-head, with both jockeys furiously whipping their horses in the shadow of the wire. Union Rags stuck a neck in front at the end and gave fans a thrilling finish that was certainly reminiscent of the sidelined I’ll Have Another. “He jumped right in there and before I could do anything about it, it was too late to stop him,” said Smith, the 46year-old Hall of Famer who was aboard

Bodemeister in the two earlier defeats. “I certainly didn’t want to let the stewards decide the outcome of the race.” The win also signaled a change of fortune for Union Rags. At the Kentucky Derby, where he was the second choice in betting, he was knocked around by Dullahan coming out of the starting gate and was trapped on the inside, leading Matz to make the jockey change. In the Florida Derby, he got stuck in traffic and broke free too late, ending up third. As the even-money favorite in last year’s Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, Union Rags got forced wide for most of the race before closing the gap while running erratically and losing by a head. “We always thought this horse had Triple Crown potential,” Matz said. “He had trouble in his second race and his third race. I do really think that this horse, when he has a clean trip and can show himself, is one of the best 3-year-olds in this crop. Whether he could have done something against I’ll Have Another, I don’t know, but it sure would have been fun to see.”


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 E1

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breeders, $400. 5 girls 2 boys left. All receive 1st shots & 3 doses of de-wormer prior to adoption. Doug & Holly McIntosh 541.588.0274 or email sisterssaints@gmail.com

THE BULLETIN re- Wanted- paying cash quires computer adfor Hi-fi audio & stuvertisers with multiple dio equip. McIntosh, ad schedules or those JBL, Marantz, Dyselling multiple sysnaco, Heathkit, Santems/ software, to dissui, Carver, NAD, etc. close the name of the Call 541-261-1808 246 business or the term 261 "dealer" in their ads. Guns, Hunting Private party advertisMedical Equipment & Fishing ers are defined as those who sell one ATTENTION DIABETCASH!! computer. ICS with Medicare. For Guns, Ammo & Get a FREE talking Reloading Supplies. 260 meter and diabetic 541-408-6900. testing supplies at NO Misc. Items COST, plus FREE Don’t miss the home delivery! Best GUN DOG EXPO A/C Unit, Westingof all, this meter elimiJune 22-23-24, house, 5000 BTU, nates painful finger Portland, OR. See: $80, 541-233-7963 pricking! Call www.GunDogExpo.com Buying Diamonds 888-739-7199. /Gold for Cash (PNDC) DO YOU HAVE 212 Saxon’s Fine Jewelers SOMETHING TO 265 Antiques & 541-389-6655 SELL Building Materials Collectibles FOR $500 OR BUYING LESS? Lionel/American Flyer Bend Habitat Antique Hutch - 6’x3’ Non-commercial trains, accessories. RESTORE 100 yrs + $200 OBO advertisers may 541-408-2191. Building Supply Resale for info. 541-388-5696 place an ad Quality at LOW BUYING & SELLING with our Antique Mills putter with PRICES All gold jewelry, silver "QUICK CASH wood shaft, $150. 740 NE 1st and gold coins, bars, SPECIAL" 541-318-5732 541-312-6709 rounds, wedding sets, 1 week 3 lines $12 Open to the public. class rings, sterling silAntiques wanted: tools, or ver, coin collect, vinfurn., fishing, marbles, 2 weeks $20! BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS tage watches, dental old sports gear, cosAd must gold. Bill Fleming, Search the area’s most tume jewelry, rock include price of 541-382-9419. comprehensive listing of posters. 541-389-1578 single item of $500 classiied advertising... or less, or multiple Eureka upright vacuum Antique weather vane real estate to automotive, items whose total cleaner, $20. Call with trees & deer, merchandise to sporting does not exceed 541-233-7963 $150. 541-318-5732 goods. Bulletin Classiieds $500. appear every day in the print or on line. Call Classifieds at Call 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin r ecommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Call The Bulletin At PEOPLE giving pets 541-385-5809 away are advised to be selective about the Place Your Ad Or E-Mail new owners. For the At: www.bendbulletin.com protection of the ani- Yorkie, adult reg, fenced mal, a personal visit to yard, needs loving the animal's new family, un-altered home is recom$400, 541-233-3534 mended. Yorkie AKC pups, small, big eyes,shots,parents in home, 1 boy, 1 girl, $950+, 541-316-0005. Pit Bull puppies, (2) females, black with 210 white chest & black with grey chest. Furniture & Appliances Sweet natured parents. $100 each A1 Washers&Dryers 541-382-3751 $150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also Pitbull Purebred Pups, wanted, used W/D’s blue’s & seal brindles, 541-280-7355 $200 OBO, call Polly, Beer “Pump”,1940, $500, 541-280-8720 made in England by Clothing Rack,w/wheels Gaskell & Chambers, fits everything, $40, 541-408-4613 541-233-7963 . Civil War Soldier daCouch, multi-colored, guerreotype in unicream, $60, form with scabbard 541-233-7963 $150. 541-343-8270 Poodle pups, toy, for Desk, Corner ComSALE. Also Rescued puter, large, sturdy, Poodle Adults for $28, 541-536-1333. adoption, to loving homes. 541-475-3889 Entertainment Centers Visit our HUGE (1)1-piece,$150,(1) oak home decor Queensland Heelers 4-piece, $400, pics standard & mini,$150 & consignment store. avail., 541-208-5053. up. 541-280-1537 http:// New items rightwayranch.wordpress.com Floral print couch, good arrive daily! condition, $60. 930 SE Textron, Redbone & Bloodhound 541-233-7963 Bend 541-318-1501 cross, 2.5 yrs., great www.redeuxbend.com house dog or kids dog, GENERATE SOME excitement in your $100, 541-447-1323 neighborhood! Plan a Pooley Armoire, 1 of a kind, pictures avail., garage sale and don't $900 OBO, must see, forget to advertise in 541-280-5053. classified! 541-385-5809. The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all Glass coffee table on ads from The Bulletin gold stand, $50. Shetland Sheepdogs newspaper onto The 541-233-7963 Registered, (Shelties), Bulletin Internet web2 females - $300 3 Maytag ceramic convecsite. Males- $250 to loving tion 2-oven stove, homes 541-977-3982 $150. 541-382-9211 Sponsors needed for Microwave, all phases Annie, Blaine, Clark, $100. Dishwasher Vintage Doilies, many Dawn, Echo, Flora, styles, 20 @ $10 each $100. 541-382-9211 Garth, Hannah, Irene, 541-318-5732 Jewel, Kittles, Lincoln, NEED TO CANCEL 240 Nora & Shadow, cats YOUR AD? found in a rural home The Bulletin Crafts & Hobbies where their owner died Classifieds has an alone a couple of days "After Hours" Line earlier after a long illPottery studio: evCall 541-383-2371 ness. All of the cats erything must go: 24 hrs. to cancel needed vet care & clay, glazes, tools, your ad! some still need prof. raw materials, mingrooming, one may Recliner, Floral, La-Zerals, pumps, and need an eye removed Boy, fits 2 people, more. Saturday from & another has broken $50, 541-233-7963 10-4 p.m. or call: teeth. Nonprofit Cat 541-480-0696. Rescue, Adoption & Refrigerator: white 26 Some free items.45 cu.ft. Kenmore $150. Foster Team was NW Irving. Bend. Cash, you haul. asked by law officials 541-382-9211 to remove the cats but can't provide funding. 241 This is a big financial Rocking chair, handBicycles & made, rustic Alder, hit for a small, no-kill $200. 503-853-0418 Accessories volunteer group, so donations of quality Sofa,sectional $150,2bed food & litter & funding $100 ea, Dinette set, would be greatly ap$150, 503-349-5000. preciated, also caring short-term foster & Table, Round Glass, w/4 adoptive homes. 541chairs, cast iron frame, 389-8420 598-5488, $75, 541-233-7963 2007 GT Downhill info@craftcats.org Table, round solid oak, Racer Pro, all the mail: PO Box 6441, 4 white trim chairs, bells & whistles, $500, Bend OR 97708; or $60, 541-233-7963 541-408-4613. visit www.craftcats.org,

Cannondale R500 Road Bike, dk green, 54cm, converted to flat bar (drops incl), exc cond, $400. 541-382-2259

Oregon’s Largest 3 Day GUN & KNIFE SHOW June 15-16-17 Portland Expo Center THIS MONTH The Duel Elite Truck Traveling Showcase - tour the Trucks & enter to win! details at

www.CollectorsWest.com

Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Sun 10-4 Adm. $9 (includes Showcase tour)

Garden lights, 4 matching, 1 similar, out of old Brand Restaurant, 7+ ft, $250 all. 541-604-1686 GENERATE SOME EXCITEMENT IN YOUR NEIGBORHOOD. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut payments by up to half. Stop creditors from calling. 866-775-9621. (PNDC)

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Handbag, Black Watch plaid, wool with Door-to-door selling with leather handles new fast results! It’s the easiest $40. 541-318-5732. way in the world to sell. Kirby Generation II selfpropelled vacuum, The Bulletin Classiied $80. 541-233-7963 541-385-5809 Ruger SR-9, $450. XDM-40, $550. AR-15, $950. 541-647-8931

Kirby Heritage II, good condition, $60. 541-233-7963

LaTour Eiffel handbag Smith & Wesson .44 & wallet, new in bag, Mag, leather holster, $125. 541-318-5732 629 Classic, $600, 541-410-0557. MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. NEW! FastStart enWanted: Collector gine. Ships FREE. seeks high quality One-Year fishing items. Money-Back GuarCall 541-678-5753, or antee when you buy 503-351-2746 DIRECT. Call for the DVD and FREE Good 249 Soil book! Art, Jewelry 877-357-5647. & Furs (PNDC) Showtime’s hit Dexter DVD set, seasons 1-5 $75. 541-318-5732

266

Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A certified woodstove may be identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves. 267

Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4’ x 4’ x 8’ • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.

Slow Cooker, West Bend Crockery, brand new, Bev Doolittle Print, $30, 541-233-7963. “Doubled Back”, numThe Bulletin Offers bered & signed, matted & framed, etched Free Private Party Ads glass w/words “Doubled • 3 lines - 3 days Back”, 27.5”x40”, exc. • Private Party Only cond., $2499, • Total of items adver- Dry seasoned tamarack red fir, $165 rnd, $185 541-388-4290 tised must equal $200 split 541-977-4500 or or Less 541-416-3677 255 • Limit 1 ad per month • 3-ad limit for same Lodgepole Pine, Computers item advertised within dry rounds, $160/cord. 3 months Available now, PC, complete,KDS XFlat, Call 541-385-5809 local delivery. WinXP, HP Slim Line, Fax 541-385-5802 541-389-0322. $100, 541-233-7963


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

E2 SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

PU Z ZL E A NS W ER O N PAG E E 3

PLACE AN AD

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. Wednesday. . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . 11:00 am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat.

Starting at 3 lines

Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

*UNDER $500 in total merchandise 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16.00 *Must state prices in ad

Garage Sale Special 4 lines for 4 days. . . . . . . . . . . . $20.00

OVER $500 in total merchandise 4 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $18.50 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $33.50 28 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $61.50

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

(call for commercial line ad rates)

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 269

270

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Lost & Found

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email

classified@bendbulletin.com

Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes Instant Landscaping Co.

541-389-9663 SUPER TOP SOIL

www.hersheysoilandbark.com

Screened, soil & compost mixed, no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949. 270

Lost & Found Lost precious 7lb Pomeranian female, all black, white face, microchipped, “Ebony,” 5/15, 78th St between Bend & Redmond. 541-639-3222

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society in Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond, 541-923-0882 Prineville, 541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.

325

476

Farm Market

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

300

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

308

Farm Equipment & Machinery

Wanted Used Farm 275 Equipment & Machinery. Looking to buy, or Auction Sales consign of good used quality equipment. US 97: Murphy Rd Deschutes Valley Parrell Rd Equipment Sealed Bid Auction 541-548-8385 One 3/2 ranch style house w/dbl garage, 325 1460 sq.ft. No real Hay, Grain & Feed estate, buildings only. Must be moved. Bids due by 5 pm, 6/15/12. 1st quality grass hay, 70# For info & bid packet bales, barn stored, $220/ call 541-388-6400. ton. Also 700# sq. bales, $77 ea. Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence ixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you’ll ind professional help in The Bulletin’s “Call a Service Professional” Directory

541-385-5809

3A Livestock Supplies •Panels •Gates •Feeders Now galvanized! •6-Rail 12’ panels, $101 •6-Rail 16’ panels, $117 Custom sizes available 541-475-1255

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin 333

284

Estate Sales

Sales Southwest Bend

Multi-Family Sale: Fri., Look What I Found! Sat., Sun., 8-6, AnYou'll find a little bit of tiques, furniture, camp everything in gear, household, artThe Bulletin's daily work, reloading equip., garage and yard sale 19032 Shoshone Rd section. From clothes to collectibles, from 286 housewares to hardSales Northeast Bend ware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious HH F R E E HH consumers. And if you're planning your G a r a g e S a l e K it own garage or yard Place an ad in The sale, look to the clasBulletin for your gasifieds to bring in the rage sale and rebuyers. You won't find ceive a Garage Sale a better place Kit FREE! for bargains! KIT IN C L U D E S: Call Classifieds: • 4 Garage Sale Signs 541-385-5809 or • $1.00 Off Coupon To email classified@bendbulletin.com

Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!” • And Inventory Sheet

282

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

Sales Northwest Bend Kitchen, holiday decor, photo art, shoes, misc. SUN. only 8-4,

1901 NW West Hills Ave.

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

400 421

Schools & Training AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 1-877-804-5293. (PNDC) ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 866-688-7078 www.CenturaOnline.c om (PNDC)

Poultry, Rabbits, & Supplies

DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW?

Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!

541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454 - Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

I have 30+ years exp in housekeeping, pet, 286 farm & ranch care. Call 541-388-2706 Sales Northeast Bend BOER and Nubian goats, does, wethers 476 and bucks. SPRING CLEANING Employment 541-923-7116 GARAGE SALE Fri, June 15th 7am-5pm Opportunities 358 Dead stock items, discontinued lighting Farmers Column Caregiver – Night fixtures, bulbs, conShifts avail. Apply in trols, fittings, office 10X20 STORAGE person. Interviews this furniture, you name it! BUILDINGS week. 1099 NE Watt All being sold for penfor protecting hay, Way, Bend. nies on the dollar. firewood, livestock Special lot pricing for etc. $1496 Installed. Caregivers pallet quantities. 541-617-1133. Home Instead SeCash & carry. CCB #173684. nior Care is curNorth Coast Electric, kfjbuilders@ykwc.net rently seeking Car1260 NE 1st, Bend. egivers in Sisters (15) Main line irrigation and surrounding arpipe, 40’ x 5”, $1.80/ft. eas to provide 288 541-604-4415 in-home care to seSales Southeast Bend Horse Facility between niors, allowing them Redmond & Terrebto remain at home Garage Sale: Sat.-Sun., onne, 35 acres, 14 irfor as long as pos8:30-3:30, canoe, furrigated,outdoor arena, sible. Candidates niture, antiques, more, corrals, 2 barns, $500 must be able to lift 22574 Calgary Dr. mo, also 42x36 shop, up to 25lbs assist w/ $350, 541-419-1917. transfers. Shifts include Sat/Sun and Pasture for Lease,2+ irri292 flexibility needed. gated acre, w/attached Training provided. Sales Other Areas 1 acre dry lot, equine Ability to pass backonly, $50-$75/head/mo, ground checks and Huge Moving Sale. 40 541-678-3264. valid ODL. Contact yrs of treasures. 6/9 & 541-330-6400 or fax 6/10, 9-4. 53346 Riv- Want to buy Alfalfa resume to erview Dr., LaPine. standing, in Central 541-330-7362. 541-536-1015. Ore. 541-419-2713 Livestock & Equipment

FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

www.bendbulletin.com

DESCHUTES COUNTY

F & I Manager Big Country RV, Inc., Central Oregon’s Largest RV Dealership, is growing and adding a F&I Manager. Ideal candidate would have experience selling extended service agreements and other finance products. Candidate must possess high moral character, excellent interpersonal skills, experience with Lenders, attention to detail and be able to work weekends. Unlimited earning potential, excellent benefit package including • IRA • Dental Plan • Medical Insurance

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

Where buyers meet sellers

Look at: Thousands of ads daily Want to buy Alfalfa Bendhomes.com in print and online. standing, in Central Ore. 541-419-2713 Eggs, farm fresh, extra for Complete Listings of To place your ad, visit large browns, $2.50/ Area Real Estate for Sale www.bendbulletin.com Wheat Straw: Certified & dozen, 541-433-2112 Bedding Straw & Garden or call 541-385-5809 TRUCK SCHOOL Straw;Compost.546-6171 www.IITR.net 341 Redmond Campus USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Horses & Equipment Please send resume to: Student Loans/Job Big Country RV, Inc. Door-to-door selling with Waiting Toll Free COLT STARTING 63500 N Hwy 97, 1-888-438-2235 fast results! It’s the easiest We build solid foundaBend, OR 97701 way in the world to sell. tions. Check us out. or via email at 454 541-419-3405 accounting@bigcrv.com Looking for Employment www.steelduststable.com The Bulletin Classiied 345

280

Employment

541-385-5809

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH DEPUTY DIRECTOR (2012-00022) – Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position $7,036 - $9,451 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE DATE EXTENDED, OPEN UNTIL FILLED. CORRECTIONS DEPUTY AND DEPUTY SHERIFF (2012-00041) – Sheriff’s Office. There are currently no positions available. This recruitment will be used to create a hiring list to be used over the next eighteen months, for possible future vacancies. Deadline: SUNDAY, 06/17/12. DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES PROGRAM MANAGER (2012-00010) - Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position $5,933 - $7,970 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. DEADLINE DATE EXTENDED, OPEN UNTIL FILLED, WITH SECOND REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON MONDAY, 06/18/2012. EMPLOYMENT SPECIALIST (Behavioral Health Specialist I) (2012-00039) – Behavioral Health Division. Part-time position $2,489 - $3,408 per month for a 129.5 hour work month (30 hr/wk). Deadline: TUESDAY, 06/12/12. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF (2012-00040) – Sheriff’s Office. The Reserve program requires 360 hours of training, which includes two evening classes per week and all day on Saturday. Deadline: SUNDAY, 06/17/12. TO APPLY ONLINE FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT www.deschutes.org/jobs Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 388-6553. Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 E3

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

476

476

573

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Business Opportunities

Sales - Garden center Sales Person needed with 2-3 years experience required, including good knowledge of Central Oregon plants. Please Email your resume to melissa@schultzfa rmandgarden.com or fax to 541-923-2576. Security

See our website for available Security sitions, along with 42 reasons to join team!

our pothe our

www.securityprosbend.com

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE E2 476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

General Central Oregon Community College has openings listed below. Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Metolius Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/ speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Campus Public Safety Supervisor Responsible for supervising the office of Campus Public Safety. Serve as the environmental/occupational safety resource for all employees. 3yrs exp req. $3781-$4502/mo.

Closes June 13. Supervisor of Science Lab Technicians and Tutors Responsible for supervising science tutors and provide discipline-specific tutor training (Biology, Chemistry, and Physical Science Labs). Must have working knowledge of Biology and Chemistry at college level. $3348-$3986/mo.

Closes June 25.

General

Jefferson County Job Opportunity Patrol Deputy, Salary Depends on Experience and Qualifications – Certified Preferred Closes: June 13th, 2012 For complete job description and application form go to www.co.jefferson.or. us; click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to: Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. Jefferson County is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer

Get your business

GROWIN

G

with an ad in The Bulletin’s “Call A Service Professional” Directory

Assistant Director of HEALTHCARE Certified Nursing Bookstore Responsible for the Assistant (CNA) daily operations of the Redmond School DisBookstore. Includes trict 7.5 hr/day CNA; operations, manageStart date: 8/30/12 ment, merchandising, Salary - $13.70/hr; inventory, and cashApprox. 191-days/yr; ier point-of-sales. Great benefits; Post$42,691-$50,822. ing closes 8/22/12. Please visit the District Closes June 17. website at ________________ www.redmond.k12.or.us

to review posting, job Assistant Professor description & how to of Automotive apply. Contact Carol Technology Gustaveson at Provide instruction to students in a Master carol.gustaveson Automotive Techni- @redmond.k12.or.us for additional cian Certificate proinformation. gram and Automotive Management Associ- MANUFACTURING ate of Applied Science degree program. Central Oregon mill is Start Fall 2012. accepting resumes for $38,209-$46,309 for 9 a full time months/yr. Closes Forklift Operator June 28. with cabinet shop experience who can Part-Time Instructors multi task. High enCOCC is always lookergy for a fast paced ing for talented indienvironment needed. viduals to teach We offer an excellent part-time in a variety benefits package. Pay of disciplines. Check is D.O.E. our web site for instructor needs. All poPlease email sitions pay $500 per your resume to: load unit (1 LU = 1 Employment.resumes@ class credit), with adymail.com ditional perks. Need to get an ad in ASAP? Need help ixing stuff? You can place it Call A Service Professional online at: ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 Cable

The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Real Estate Agent Services Receptionist Part-Time position available for top producing real estate office in Bend. Mon-Fri, 2:30pm–5pm. Candidate must possess stellar customer service skills and innate aptitude for technology. Position requires Good classiied ads tell a personable dethe essential facts in an meanor & the ability to multi-task with ease. interesting Manner. Write Please fax your re- from the readers view - not the seller’s. Convert the sume to 503.905.4800 facts into beneits. Show or email to: the reader how the item will irish@hasson.com. Also, please leave a help them in some way. voice message at 1.866.905.4700 stating position of interest. No agencies please! Remember.... Add your web ad- Transportation dress to your ad and OREGON readers on The DEPARTMENT OF Bulletin' s web site TRANSPORTATION will be able to click through automatically Engineering to your site. Specialist 2 - Drafter Bend RV Sales Mgr Big Country RV, Central Oregon's largest The purpose of this position is to function as RV dealership is a Drafter for Region 4 adding a Sales Manand as a member of a ager position. Indusdesign team of 11 try experience reemployees responquired. Full-time, sible for the drafting weekends required. and design of the Exceptional pay and roadway portion of benefits. Submit recontract plans. Salary sume to 63500 N Hwy $2978- $4399/month 97, Bend, OR 97701 + excellent benefits. attention Teresa or via For details please visit email at www.odotjobs.com for accounting@bigcrv.com ODOT12-0353oc or RV Salesperson call the automated Big Country RV, Inc., application hotline at Central Oregon’s 503-986-3847 or Largest RV Dealer1-866-ODOT-JOB ship, is growing and (1-866-636-8562) or adding to our strong 711 (Relay Operator sales staff. We are for the Deaf) between looking for the right 8:00 am and 5:00 pm person who wants a (Pacific Time) Moncareer in one of the day through Friday. fastest growing inThis job closes on dustries in Central June 17, 2012 at Oregon. Great op11:59 PM. ODOT is portunity for the right an AA/EEO Employer individual in a wellcommitted to building established, well-run workforce diversity. environment. Exceptional inventory of new and used RVs. Unlim- CAUTION READERS: ited earning potential with an excellent ben- Ads published in "Employment Opportuniefit package to inties" include emclude: ployee and • IRA independent posi• Dental Plan tions. Ads for posi• Medical Insurance tions that require a fee • Up to 35% commisor upfront investment sion must be stated. With • Great Training any independent job opportunity, please Must be able to work investigate thorweekends and have a oughly. passion for the RV business. Please apply in person, or drop Use extra caution when applying for jobs onresume off at: line and never proBig Country RV, Inc. vide personal infor3500 N. Hwy 97 mation to any source Bend, OR 97701 you may not have reor email a resume to searched and deemed accounting@bigcrv.com to be reputable. Use RV Tech extreme caution when Big Country RV, Cenresponding to ANY tral Oregon's largest online employment RV dealership is ad from out-of-state. seeking an experienced RV Tech, top We suggest you call dollar & benefits. the State of Oregon Great working enviConsumer Hotline at ronment. Apply in 1-503-378-4320 person at: 63500 N. Hwy 97, Bend. For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673-0764

Technical Support Representative Do you enjoy solving problems and exceeding customer expectations? BendBroadband is a well-respected technology company bringing connectivity and content to thousands of households in Central Oregon. As a Technical Support Representative for BendBroadand, your passion for providing positive customer experiences will contribute to the success of the company. Using your technology expertise, you will be able to solve the many problems that our customers. We are continually offering new technology to our customers and as a Technical Support Rep you will be at the forefront of this technology evolution. To be a successful Technical Support Rep, you will:

• Continually think about ways to improve the way we do business • Thrive in a fast-paced work environment that requires you to multi-task • Take pride in the interactions you have with your customers and team members • Achieve sales goals and be rewarded by incentive plans • Meet call center performance metrics • Use your technical skills and patience to solve problems for customers • Possess strong computer skills and attention to detail • Strive to continually improve your skills and abilities If this describes you and you are hungry for a change, apply online at www.bendbroadband/careers. BendBroadband offers a collaborative work environment, training and development opportunities, competitive pay and excellent benefits that include a 401k plan with company match and free broadband services. As an equal opportunity employer, we encourage minorities, women, and people with disabilities to apply. BendBroadband is a drug free workplace.

Transportation OREGON DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Transportation Maintenance Specialist 2 – Lakeview (Highway Maintenance Specialist)

WARNING The Bulletin recommends that you investigate every phase of investment opportunities, especially those from out-of-state or offered by a person doing business out of a local motel or hotel. Investment offerings must be registered with the Oregon Department of Finance. We suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-503-378-4320, 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri.

Come join our ODOT Maintenance team! We have a permanent full time position open in Lakeview. As a member of this crew you will operate light and heavy equipment, A Classified ad is an perform manual labor EASY WAY TO and help maintain, reREACH over 3 million pair and reconstruct Pacific Northwesternroadways, highways, ers. $525/25-word freeways, bridges etc. classified ad in 30 Salary $ 2624 daily newspapers for -$3783/month + ex3-days. Call the Pacellent benefits. For cific Northwest Daily details please visit Connection (916) www.odotjobs.com or 288-6019 or email call 866-ODOT-JOB elizabeth@cnpa.com for Announcement for more info (PNDC) #ODOT12-0100oc and application infor- Advertise VACATION SPECIALS to 3 milmation. Opportunity lion Pacific Northcloses on June 12, westerners! 30 daily 2012 @ 11:59 PM. newspapers, six ODOT is an AA/EEO states. 25-word clasEmployer, committed sified $525 for a 3-day to building workforce ad. Call (916) diversity. 288-6019 or visit Transportation www.pnna.com/advert ising_pndc.cfm for the OREGON Pacific Northwest DEPARTMENT OF Daily Connection. TRANSPORTATION (PNDC) Transportation Mainte- Extreme Value Advertising! 30 Daily newsnance Specialist 2papers $525/25-word Adel Winter Seasonal classified, 3-days. (Highway Maintenance Reach 3 million PaSpecialist) cific Northwesterners. For more information Come join our ODOT call (916) 288-6019 or Maintenance team! email: We have a Winter elizabeth@cnpa.com seasonal position for the Pacific Northopen in Adel. As a west Daily Connecmember of this crew tion. (PNDC) you will operate light and heavy equipment, SOCIAL SECURITY perform manual labor DISABILITY BENand help maintain, reEFITS. WIN or Pay pair and reconstruct Nothing! Start Your roadways, highways, Application In Under freeways, bridges etc. 60 Seconds. Call ToSalary $ 2624 day! Contact Disabil$3783/month + exity Group, Inc. Licellent benefits. For censed Attorneys & details please visit BBB Accredited. Call www.odotjobs.com or 888-782-4075. call 866-ODOT-JOB (PNDC) for Announcement #ODOT12-0097oc Looking for your and application infornext employee? mation. Opportunity closes on June 12, Place a Bulletin help 2012 @ 11:59 PM. wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 ODOT is an AA/EEO readers each week. Employer, committed Your classified ad to building workforce will also appear on diversity. bendbulletin.com FIND IT! which currently reBUY IT! ceives over 1.5 million page views SELL IT! every month at The Bulletin Classiieds no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Looking for your next Get Results! Call employee? 385-5809 or place Place a Bulletin help your ad on-line at wanted ad today and bendbulletin.com reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com Rentals which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 630 or place Rooms for Rent your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & linens. New Finance owners.$145-$165/wk & Business 541-382-1885

600

500 528

Loans & Mortgages

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Alpine Meadows Townhomes 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Starting at $625. 541-330-0719

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616 - Want To Rent 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654 - Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos & Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

648

Houses for Rent General

748

Real Estate For Sale

Northeast Bend Homes

Mt. View Park, exlnt view! 1500 sf, 3 bdrm PUBLISHER'S 2 bath, dbl garage, NOTICE nice open plan, large All real estate adverTrex deck, lrg corner tising in this newspalot. Community pool & per is subject to the hot tub. By owner, Fair Housing Act $209,000. 732 which makes it illegal Call 541-388-4209 to advertise "any Commercial/Investment or 541-536-4243 preference, limitation Properties for Sale or discrimination 749 based on race, color, ½ acre in Prineville OR Southeast Bend Homes religion, sex, handiindustrial park 24'x80' cap, familial status, shop with 40'x60' 3 Bdrm, 1 level, approx. marital status or naunfinished addition, 4 yrs. old, like new, tional origin, or an in$160,000. Call for 1322 sq.ft., dbl. garage tention to make any more info; can send w/opener, nice open such preference, pics. 541-604-0344 plan, A/C,media panel, limitation or discrimiquiet cul-de-sac, low nation." Familial staCALL FOR OFFERS maint. yard, on land tus includes children Bend, OR lease, $68,000, under the age of 18 Bank Owned 503-810-5661. living with parents or 1,306 acres, Zoned legal custodians, Forest Use. Offers 750 pregnant women, and due 6/19/12. Redmond Homes people securing cusStephen Toomey, tody of children under Broker 18. This newspaper Compass Commercial Looking for your next will not knowingly ac541.383.2444 employee? cept any advertising stoomey@compass Place a Bulletin help for real estate which is commercial.com wanted ad today and in violation of the law. reach over 60,000 Our readers are readers each week. hereby informed that Your classified ad all dwellings adverwill also appear on tised in this newspabendbulletin.com per are available on Wall Street retail propwhich currently reerty, 5925 sq ft, an equal opportunity ceives over 100% leased. basis. To complain of 1.5 million page Broker/Owner. discrimination call views every month Call 541-815-4140 HUD toll-free at at no extra cost. 1-800-877-0246. The Bulletin Classifieds 740 toll free telephone Get Results! number for the hear- Condo/Townhomes Call 385-5809 or for Sale ing impaired is place your ad on-line 1-800-927-9275. at bendbulletin.com $125,900 townRented your prophouse 2 bdrm/2 erty? The Bulletin bath. Near shops/ Classifieds hospital. Passive has an "After Hours" Tick, Tock solar heat, wood Line. Call stove, garage, priTick, Tock... 541-383-2371 24 vate patio. HOA's hours to ...don’t let time get $207/mo. cancel your ad! 1953 NE Otelah Pl. away. Hire a 650 Call 503-881-6540 professional out Houses for Rent of The Bulletin’s NE Bend 744 “Call A Service Open Houses A quiet newer 3 bdrm, Professional” 2.5 bath, 1692 sq.ft., Directory today! mtn views. dbl. gaOpen 12-3 rage w/opener. $1195 19151 Chiloquin 762 541-480-3393,610-7803. Dr. Homes with Acreage Lots of Space When buying a home, on One Level 83% of Central 1592 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 Shelley Griffin, Oregonians turn to bath, site-built, 2 car Broker attached heated ga541-280-3804 rage, 24x36 heated, finished shop w/10’ Call 541-385-5809 to ceilings & 220V power, place your all on 1.22 treed acre Real Estate ad. lot in CRR, too much to list, $195,000. Call 541-504-8730 Looking for your next employee? 771 Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and Lots reach over 60,000 readers each week. Large Custom Your classified ad Home Sites will also appear on in NorthWest bendbulletin.com, Open 12-3 currently receiving Crossing. 60639 over 1.5 million page Thunderbird views, every month The Garner Group Secluded Setting at no extra cost. in Mountain High 541-383-4360 Bulletin Classifieds Suzanne Iselin, Get Results! Broker Call 541-385-5809 or 541-350-8617 place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

700

WARNING Professionally The Bulletin recommanaged by mends you use cauNorris & Stevens, Inc. tion when you provide personal Call for Specials! information to companies offering loans or Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms credit, especially w/d hookups, those asking for adpatios or decks. vance loan fees or Mountain Glen companies from out of 541-383-9313 state. If you have Professionally managed by concerns or quesNorris & Stevens, Inc. tions, we suggest you consult your attorney Located by BMC/Costco, or call CONSUMER 2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex, 658 HOTLINE, 55+,2350 NEMary Rose 1-877-877-9392. Houses for Rent Pl, #1, $795 no smoking Redmond Ever Consider a Re- or pets, 541-390-7649 verse Mortgage? At SPRING IN FOR A Spacious Country home least 62 years old? GREAT DEAL!! Advertise your car! in NE Redmond. 2 Stay in your home & $299 1st month’s rent! * Add A Picture! master bdrm/bath increase cash flow! 2 bdrm, 1 bath Reach thousands of readers! suites, large living rm, Safe & Effective! Call $530 & 540 Call 541-385-5809 spacious kitchen/din745 Now for your FREE Carports & A/C incl! The Bulletin Classifieds If you have any quesing, $725, taking appliDVD! Call Now Homes for Sale Fox Hollow Apts. tions, concerns or cations, 541-419-1917. 888-785-5938. (541) 383-3152 773 comments, contact: (PNDC) Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co 4270 sq ft, 6 bdrm, 6 ba, Kevin O’Connell 659 Acreages *Upstairs only with lease* 4-car, corner, .83 acre Classified Department Reverse Mortgages Houses for Rent mtn view, by owner. Manager by local expert *** 636 $590,000 541-390-0886 Sunriver The Bulletin Mike LeRoux CHECK YOUR AD See: bloomkey.com/8779 Apt./Multiplex NW Bend NMLS57716 541-383-0398 Please check your ad In River Meadows a 3 Call to learn more. on the first day it runs Beautiful updated, cozy bdrm, 1.5 bath, 1376 BANK OWNED HOMES! 541-350-7839 FREE List w/Pics! to make sure it is cor1 bdrm, 2 bath 1100 sq. ft., woodstove, Security1 Lending rect. Sometimes inNMLS98161 sq. ft. condo, 2 blocks brand new carpet/oak www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate structions over the from downtown, along floors, W/S pd, $895. 20967 yeoman, bend or phone are misunderbanks of Deschutes, 541-480-3393 Education stood and an error A/C, 1 parking spot, or 541-610-7803 NOTICE: Oregon State University – Cascades in can occur in your ad. indoor pool, hot tub & All real estate adverBend, Oregon If this happens to your sauna, credit & ref. VILLAGE PROPERTIES tised here in is subad, please contact us check, min. 1 yr. Sunriver, Three Rivers, ject to the Federal Admissions and Academic Advisor the first day your ad La Pine. Great lease, no pets. $675, Fair Housing Act, appears and we will Selection. Prices range utilities included. which makes it illegal Oregon State University-Cascades is acceptbe happy to fix it as $425 - $2000/mo. Kerrie, 541-480-0325. to advertise any prefing applications for an Admissions and Acasoon as we can. View our full erence, limitation or demic Advisor. Responsibilities include impleDeadlines are: Weekinventory online at discrimination based Garage Sales Village-Properties.com menting OSU-Cascades recruitment activities days 11:00 noon for on race, color, reliand new student programs in support of camnext day, Sat. 11:00 1-866-931-1061 gion, sex, handicap, Garage Sales pus enrollment goals; representing OSU-Casa.m. for Sunday and familial status or nacades at prospective student events which reMonday. 687 Garage Sales tional origin, or intenquires extensive travel; providing academic 541-385-5809 Commercial for tion to make any such advising to OSU undergraduate students; and Thank you! Find them preferences, limita- The Bulletin Classified Rent/Lease helping students with academic planning and tions or discrimination. in progress towards graduation. Position is *** We will not knowingly Office/Warehouse lo12-month, F/T, with a salary range of $33,000 The Bulletin accept any advertiscated in SE Bend. Up - $36,000. Minimum requirements include 775 ing for real estate to 30,000 sq.ft., comClassiieds Bachelor’s degree in discipline of choice. For a Manufactured/ which is in violation of petitive rate, complete position description and to review this law. All persons 541-382-3678. Mobile Homes 541-385-5809 additional minimum requirements use the folare hereby informed lowing link to view or apply for this position that all dwellings ad- Very nice, well maint, http://oregonstate.edu/jobs Use posting num- College Way Town- Warehouse - Industrial vertised are available unit for rent. 5600 2/2, near Costco/Fohomes adjacent to ber 0009092 (or the location of “Bend”) to apon an equal opportusq.ft., $2250/month, rum, Senior Park COCC starting $1050/ ply on-line. The closing date is 06/12/12. nity basis. The Bullenear Bend High. w/pool, $39,500, call month. 541-388-1239 OSU is an AA/EOE. tin Classified owner, 541-280-0955. 541-389-8794. cascadiapropertymgmt.com


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

E4 SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Boats & RV’s

860

860

860

875

880

880

881

882

Motorcycles & Accessories

Motorcycles & Accessories

Motorcycles & Accessories

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

800 850

Snowmobiles

HD FAT BOY 1996

Harley Davidson Heritage Classic 2000, Softail, 7200 mi, many extras, $8000. Call 541-419-5634

Completely rebuilt/ customized, low miles. Accepting offers. 541-548-4807

Polaris 2003, 4 cycle, fuel inj, elec start, re- Harley Davidson SoftTail Deluxe 2007, verse, 2-up seat, white/cobalt, w/pascover, 4900 mi, $2500 senger kit, Vance & Honda Shadow Arrow obo. 541-280-0514 2006, exlnt cond, low Hines muffler system mi, always garaged, 860 & kit, 1045 mi., exc. $3900. 541-420-4869 cond, $19,999, Motorcycles & Accessories 541-389-9188. CRAMPED FOR Just bought a new boat? CASH? Sell your old one in the Honda VT700 classiieds! Ask about our Use classified to sell Shadow 1984, 23K Super Seller rates! those items you no mi, many new parts, 541-385-5809 longer need. battery charger, Call 541-385-5809 good condition. Harley Heritage Now for $1000, Softail, 2003 cash! 541-598-4351 $5,000+ in extras, $2000 paint job, 30K mi. 1 owner, People Look for Information Find It in For more information About Products and please call The Bulletin Classifieds! Services Every Day through 541-385-8090 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds or 209-605-5537

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 (This special package is not available on our website)

Building/Contracting

Handyman

Landscaping/Yard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Verify the contractor’s CCB license through the CCB Consumer Website

Piaggio LT50 Scooter Ads published in "Wa- Gulfstream Scenic TRADE? 2004 tercraft" include: Kay2003 , rarely driven in Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Bounder by Fleet9 yrs, only 660 miles, aks, rafts and motorCummins 330 hp diewood 35’ 3 slides, mint condition; plus 2 ized personal sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 loaded. 44k, very helmets, a Mote Tote watercrafts. For in. kitchen slide out, clean, reliable w/8.1 Weekend Warrior Toy tow bar and tie down "boats" please see new tires,under cover, Workhouse chassis, Hauler 28’ 2007,Gen, accessories, all for Class 870. hwy. miles only,4 door $45,000. fuel station, exc cond. only $1750. fridge/freezer ice541-385-5809 541-382-1853 Call 541-389-3044 sleeps 8, black/gray maker, W/D combo, interior, used 3X, Interbath tub & 865 $24,999. shower, 50 amp proATVs 541-389-9188 pane gen & more! $55,000. 541-948-2310 We buy motorcycles, Looking for your ATV’s, snowmobiles next employee? & watercrafts. Place a Bulletin help Winnebago Outlook Call Ken at wanted ad today and 32’ 2008, Ford V10 Inflatable Raft,Sevylor 541-647-5151. Hunter’s Delight! Pack- eng, Wineguard sat, reach over 60,000 Fishmaster 325,10’3”, age deal! 1988 Win- TV, sur- round sound readers each week. complete pkg., $650 nebago Super Chief, stereo + more. ReYour classified ad Firm, 541-977-4461. 38K miles, great duced to will also appear on $49,000. shape; 1988 Bronco II 541-526-1622 bendbulletin.com or 4x4 to tow, 130K 541-728-6793 which currently remostly towed miles, ceives over 1.5 milnice rig! $15,000 both. We buy motorcycles, lion page views ev881 Kayak, Eddyline 541-382-3964, leave ATV’s, snowmobiles ery month at no Travel Trailers Sandpiper, 12’, like msg. & watercrafts. extra cost. Bulletin new, $975, Call Ken at Classifieds Get ReCheck out the 541-420-3277. 541-647-5151. sults! Call 385-5809 classiieds online or place your ad www.bendbulletin.com on-line at Find exactly what Updated daily bendbulletin.com you are looking for in the Jamboree 24’ 1982, Fleetwood 24’ Pioneer CLASSIFIEDS Chevy 350, 66K, all Spirit, 2007, good TURN THE PAGE new: cam, lifters, trans, cond, minor dent on 880 paint, brakes, batteries, For More Ads front saves you $$! Motorhomes upholstery, tires, fuel The Bulletin $8000. 541-419-5634 pump. Large fridge/ freezer, 4-burner stove/ oven, solar charging, Call The Bulletin At 882 Yamaha YFZ450 2005 541-385-5809 $3450 OBO, 541-549Fifth Wheels Sport Race quad, built 1736 or 808-936-7426. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 4-mil stroked to 470cc, At: www.bendbulletin.com lots of mods, $4950 obo Call 541-647-8931 2002 Country Coach SPRINGDALE 2005 Intrigue 40' Tag axle. Jayco Greyhawk 870 27’, has eating area 400hp Cummins Die2004, 31’ Class C, Boats & Accessories slide, A/C and heat, sel. Two slide-outs. 6800 mi., hyd. jacks, new tires, all con- Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 41,000 miles. Most new tires, slide out, 10’ Topper sailboat, tents included, bedoptions. $110,000 1996, 2 slides, A/C, exc. cond, $49,900, complete, $600 cash, ding towels, cooking OBO 541-678-5712 heat pump, exc. cond. 541-480-8648 or best offer. Bend, and eating utensils. for Snowbirds, solid 503-838-6274 Great for vacation, oak cabs day & night fishing, hunting or shades, Corian, tile, living! $15,500 hardwood. $12,750. 541-408-3811 541-923-3417. 12’ Smoker Craft, 5hp motor, located in Sunriver. $875 obo. 503-319-5745.

www.hirealicensedcontractor. com

or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to con- Landscaping/Yard Care tracting with anyone. Some other trades also require additional licenses and certifications.

14’ Classic P-14 Seaswirl, 20HP motor, Bimini Top, new seats, Eagle finder, trailer, ready to go, $1600, 541-923-2957.

Beaver Patriot 2000, Walnut cabinets, so- Monaco Dynasty 2004, lar, Bose, Corian, tile, loaded, 3 slides, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, $159,000, 541-923- 8572 W/D. $75,000 or 541-749-0037 (cell) 541-215-5355

Springdale 29’ 2007, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504

Monaco LaPalma 37’, Chev 1-ton RV 94K, 2004 w/ 2 slides, 25k 1967, stove, sink, mi., loaded, $42,500. fridge, 2 double beds, 541-923-3510. rebuilt 350. New: rear Computer/Cabling Install More Than Service end, clutch, exhaust, Peace of Mind tires, etc. $995. 14’ Klamath Deluxe, Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 541-410-1685 2001,15hp Mercury, + 29’, weatherized, like Spring Clean Up electric trolling motor, new, furnished & •Leaves low hours, trailer & Coachman ready to go, incl Wine•Cones seats included, National Sea Breeze Freelander 2011, gard Satellite dish, •Needles $3250. 541-977-0903 2004 M-1341 35’, gas, $26,995. 541-420-9964 27’, queen bed, 1 •Debris Hauling 2 power slides, upslide, HD TV, DVD •Aeration graded queen mat•Dethatching player, 450 Ford, tress, hyd. leveling Compost Top Dressing $49,000, please system, rear camera call 541-923-5754. & monitor, only 6k mi. Weed free Bark A steal at $43,000! & flower beds 541-480-0617 18.5’ ‘05 Reinell 185, V-6 Volvo Penta, 270HP, ORGANIC PROGRAMS RV CONSIGNMENTS low hrs., must see, WANTED $17,500, 541-330-3939 Landscape We Do The Work, You Maintenance Keep The Cash, 19.5’ 1988 373V Full or Partial Service On-Site Credit Ranger Bass Boat, Fleetwood Discovery •Mowing •Edging 40X 2008, 31K miles, Mercury 115 Motor, Approval Team, •Pruning •Weeding MUST SELL SOON, 3 Ranger trailer, trolling Web Site Presence, Just bought a new boat? Sprinkler Adjustments slides, 1-owner, great elec. motor, fish finder We Take Trade-Ins. Sell your old one in the shape, $129,975 OBO, & sonor, 2 live wells & Free Advertising. classiieds! Ask about our call Bill 541-771-3030 all accessories, new Fertilizer included BIG COUNTRY RV Super Seller rates! batteries & tires, great with monthly program Bend 541-330-2495 541-385-5809 cond., $6500. CAN’T BEAT THIS! Redmond: 541-548-5254 541-923-6555. Weekly, monthly Look before you Debris Removal buy, below market or one time service. value ! Size & mileage DOES matter, EXPERIENCED Class A 32’ HurriCommercial People Look for Information cane by Four Winds, & Residential About Products and 2007. 12,500 mi, all Services Every Day through amenities, Ford V10, Southwind 35.5’ Triton, 19-ft Mastercraft ProFree Estimates The Bulletin Classifi eds lthr, cherry, slides, 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuStar 190 inboard, Senior Discounts like new, can see pont UV coat, 7500 mi. 1987, 290hp, V8, 822 Avg NADA ret.114,343; 541-390-1466 anytime, $58,000. Painting/Wall Covering hrs, great cond, lots of asking $99,000. Same Day Response 541-548-5216 extras, $10,000 obo. Call 541-923-2774 NOTICE: OREGON 541-231-8709 Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise to perform Landscape Construction which includes: 19’ Glass Ply, Merc planting, decks, cruiser, depth finder, fences, arbors, trolling motor, trailer, water-features, and $3500, 541-389-1086 installation, repair of Electrical Services or 541-419-8034. irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contractors Board. This 20.5’ 2004 Bayliner 4-digit number is to be 205 Run About, 220 included in all adverHP, V8, open bow, tisements which indiexc. cond., very fast cate the business has w/very low hours, a bond, insurance and lots of extras incl. workers compensatower, Bimini & tion for their employcustom trailer, ees. For your protec$19,500. tion call 503-378-5909 541-389-1413 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status Where can you ind a before contracting helping hand? with the business. Persons doing landFrom contractors to scape maintenance yard care, it’s all here do not require a LCB in The Bulletin’s license. Excavating “Call A Service Professional” Directory Levi’s Dirt Works: Residential/ Comercial General Contractor For all your dirt & excavation needs. • Small jobs for Homeowners by job or hour • Utilities • Concrete • Public Works • Subcontracting • Custom Pads • Driveway grading - Low cost get rid of pot holes & smooth out your drive! • Augering 541-639-5282 CCB#194077

20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

Handyman

Pro Painter - 20+ years in Central OR New Construction Specialist Free Estimates CCB# 60218,

541-977-8329

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923

Fleetwood Wilderness 36’, 2005, 4 slides, rear bdrm, fireplace, AC, W/D hkup beautiful unit! $30,500. 541-815-2380 Keystone Laredo 2009, $30,000, 541-419-3301 or 541-419-4649 for more info. Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale Montana 34’ 2003, 2 slides, exc. cond. throughout, arctic winter pkg, new 10ply tires, W/D ready, price reduced, Now $18,000, 541-390-6531

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $37,500. 541-420-3250 Open Road 37' 2004 3 slides, W/D hookup, large LR w/rear window. Desk area. Asking $19,750 OBO Call (541) 280-7879 visit rvt.com ad#104243920 for pics

Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th wheel, 1 slide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629 Surge Guard protector 50 amp, like new, $200. Reese 16k 5th wheel hitch w/KwikSlide, $600. 541-788-1974.

Escaper 29’ 1991, 2 slides, A/C, elec/gas fridge, walk around queen bed, elec. front jacks, $4000 OBO, 541-382-8939 or 541-777-0999.

Taurus 27.5’ 1988

Everything works, $1750/partial trade for car. 541-460-9127


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

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Canopies & Campers

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Antique & Classic Autos

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Lance 11.6 camper Mdl Ford F-250 Super Duty 1999,7.3LTurbo Diesel, 1130, 1999. Ext’d cab, Chrysler 300 Coupe 4WD,6-spd. stick trans, fully self-contained. 1967, 440 engine, crew cab, A/C, pw,pdl, Incl catalytic heater, auto. trans, ps, air, short wide bed, cloth TV/VCR combo. Very frame on rebuild, rebucket seats, cruise, well taken care of, painted original blue, Silver Star front bumper clean. Hauls easily, original blue interior, w/winch, $9000, needs very comfortable. 1982 INT. Dump w/ArBarracuda original hub caps, exc. Plymouth tires & glow plugs, $7300. 541-382-1344 borhood, 6k on rebuilt 1966, original car! 300 chrome, asking $9000 541-419-2074 392, truck refurbished, hp, 360 V8, centeror make offer. Lance-Legend 990 has 330 gal. water lines, (Original 273 Need help ixing stuff? 541-385-9350. 11’3" 1998, w/ext-cab, tank w/pump & hose. eng & wheels incl.) Call A Service Professional exc. cond., generator, Everything works, 541-593-2597 ind the help you need. solar-cell, large refrig, Reduced - now $5000 www.bendbulletin.com 933 AC, micro., magic fan, OBO. 541-977-8988 bathroom shower, Chrysler SD 4-Door Pickups Ford F-350 XLT 2003, removable carpet, 1930, CDS Royal 4X4, 6L diesel, 6-spd 9’ DUMP BED custom windows, outStandard, 8-cylinder, *** manual, Super Cab, door shower/awning body is good, needs with hydraulic lift, short box, 12K Warn CHECK YOUR AD set-up for winterizing, some restoration, for 1-ton flatbed winch, custom bumper Please check your ad elec. jacks, CD/steruns, taking bids, truck, + 2 alumi& canopy, running on the first day it runs reo/4’ stinger. $8500. 541-383-3888, boards, 2 sets tires, num tool boxes. to make sure it is corBend, 541.279.0458 541-815-3318 wheels & chains, many rect. Sometimes in$2700 obo. extras, perfect, ONLY structions over the 541-410-6945 29,800 miles, $27,500 phone are misCOLLECTOR CAR OBO, 541-504-8316. understood and an error Autos & AUCTION can occur in your ad. Ford Ranger XLT Transportation Sat. July 7th, If this happens to your 1998 X-cab ROSEBURG , OR ad, please contact us 2.5L 4-cyl engine, a Graffiti Weekend the first day your ad 5-spd standard trans, Event, call now for appears and we will long bed, newer moPeterbilt 359 potable info 541-689-6824 be happy to fix it tor & paint, new clutch water truck, 1990, petersencollectorcars.com as soon as we can. & tires, excellent con3200 gal. tank, 5hp Deadlines are: Weekdition, clean, $4500. pump, 4-3" hoses, 908 days 12:00 noon for Call 541-447-6552 camlocks, $25,000. next day, Sat. 11:00 Aircraft, Parts 541-820-3724 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. & Service 12:00 for Monday. If 925 we can assist you, Utility Trailers please call us: GMC ½-ton Pickup, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 541-385-5809 1972, LWB, 350hi door panels w/flowers The Bulletin Classified motor, mechanically & hummingbirds, *** A-1, interior great; white soft top & hard body needs some Big Tex Landscaptop, Reduced! $5,500. TLC. $4000 OBO. 1/3 interest in Columing/ ATV Trailer, 541-317-9319 or Call 541-382-9441 bia 400, located at dual axle flatbed, 541-647-8483 Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4, Sunriver. $138,500. 7’x16’, 7000 lb. 1995, extended cab, Call 541-647-3718 GVW, all steel, long box, grill guard, $1400. running boards, bed 1/3 interest in well541-382-4115, or rails & canopy, 178K International Flat equipped IFR Beech 541-280-7024. miles, $4800 obo. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Bonanza A36, lo208-301-3321 (Bend) ton dually, 4 spd. cated KBDN. $55,000. 931 Ford Galaxie 500 1963, Chevy Silverado 1998, trans., great MPG, 541-419-9510 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, could be exc. wood black and silver, pro Automotive Parts, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & lifted, loaded, new 33” hauler, runs great, Just too many Service & Accessories radio (orig),541-419-4989 new brakes, $1950. tires, aluminum slot collectibles? 541-419-5480. Tires, Cooper Discov- Ford Mustang Coupe wheels, tow pkg., drop 1966, original owner, hitch, diamond plate erer M&S studded, Sell them in V8, automatic, great tool box, $12,000, or Mazda B4000 2004 245/70R16 $450 obo Cab Plus 4x4. 4½ yrs The Bulletin Classiieds shape, $9000 OBO. possible trade for newer set and Nokian VaTacoma. 541-460-9127 or 95,000 miles left on 530-515-8199 tiva M&S 245/70R16 ext’d warranty. V6, $450 obo set. Both Chevy Silverado 2500 541-385-5809 5-spd, AC, studded sets are in excellent HD 2007 extra cab, Take care of tires, 2 extra rims, shape! 541-306-9937 early model, grill your investments tow pkg, 132K mi, all Executive Hangar guard, side steps, tow records, exlnt cond, We Buy Junk at Bend Airport pkg., 6L, 115,440 all with the help from $9500. 541-408-8611 Cars & Trucks! (KBDN) hwy miles, exc. cond., The Bulletin’s Cash paid for junk 60’ wide x 50’ deep, serviced regularly, 935 vehicles, batteries & w/55’ wide x 17’ high white, $19,200, Call “Call A Service Sport Utility Vehicles catalytic converters. 541-419-3301 or bi-fold door. Natural Professional” Directory Serving all of C.O.! 541-419-4649. gas heat, office, bathCall 541-408-1090 room. Parking for 6 Dodge 1500 2001, 4x4 cars. Adjacent to sport, red, loaded, 932 Frontage Rd; great rollbar, AND 2011 CHEVY visibility for aviation Antique & Moped Trike used 3 SUBURBAN LT bus. 1jetjock@q.com Classic Autos months, street legal. 2005, low miles., 541-948-2126 call 541-433-2384 good tires, new Chevy Pickup 1951, GMC ½ ton 1971, Only Dodge 1500 STL Quad brakes, moonroof restored. $13,500 obo; $19,700! Original low Cab Hemi 4x4, 21,000 Reduced to 541-504-3253 or mile, exceptional, 3rd miles, $16,500. $15,750 503-504-2764 owner. 951-699-7171 541-318-6185 541-389-5016.

Ford Excursion 2005, 4WD, diesel, exc. cond., $19,900, call 541-923-0231.

GMC Denali 2003

loaded with options. Exc. cond., snow tires and rims included. 130k hwy miles. $12,000. 541-419-4890.

BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RV’s for Rent 940

975

975

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Jeep Cherokee 1990, 4WD, 3 sets rims & tires, exlnt set snow tires, great 1st car! $1800. 541-633-5149

Ford Windstar 1995,7 passenger, 140k, 3.8 V6, no junk. Drive it away for $1750; Nissan Quest 1996, 7 passenger, 152k, 3.0 V6, new tires, ready for next 152k, $4500. 541-318-9999, ask for Bob.

Jeep Willys 1947,custom, small block Chevy, PS, OD,mags+ trailer.Swap for backhoe.No am calls please. 541-389-6990

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $ 500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for:

900

JEEP WRANGLER X 2002 6 cyl., 5 spd., A/C, hard top, exc. cond., $11,000. 541-419-4890. Lexus RX350 2010 AWD # C058949 $39,995

$ $

10 - 3 lines, 7 days 16 - 3 lines, 14 days

(Private Party ads only) 975

Automobiles 541-598-3750

aaaoregonautosource.com

Porsche Cayenne 2004, 86k, immac, dealer maint’d, loaded, now $17000. 503-459-1580

Range Rover 2005 HSE, nav, DVD, local car, new tires, 51K miles. $24,995. 503-635-9494

Range Rover, 2006 Sport HSE,

nav, AWD, heated seats, moonroof, local owner, Harman Kardon, $23,995. 503-635-9494

Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 ONLY 3 OWNERSHIP 4x4. 120K mi, Power SHARES LEFT! Mercury Monterrey seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd 940 Economical flying in 1965, Exc. All original, row seating, extra your own Cessna 4-dr. sedan, in storVans tires, CD, privacy tint172/180 HP for only Chevy Wagon 1957, age last 15 yrs., 390 Ford F-150 1995, 112K, ing, upgraded rims. $10,000! Based at 4-dr., complete, High Compression 4X4, long bed, auto, Fantastic cond. $7995 Ford Lift Van, 1995, BDN. Call Gabe at $15,000 OBO, trades, engine, new tires & lidrivable, needs work, very clean, runs well, Contact Timm at Professional Air! please call $900 cash obo. Bend, cense, reduced to new tires, $6000. 541-408-2393 for info 541-388-0019 541-420-5453. 503-838-6274 $2850, 541-410-3425. 541-548-4039. or to view vehicle.

AUTOS & TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

AUDI QUATTRO CABRIOLET 2004, extra nice, low mileage, heated seats, new Michelins, all wheel drive, $12,995 503-635-9494.

BMW 525i 2004,

New body style, Steptronic auto., cold-weather package, premium package, heated seats, extra nice. $14,995. 503-635-9494.

Nissan Altima 2009, 47K *** miles, 30+ mpg, exc. CHECK YOUR AD cond., 1 owner, exPlease check your ad tended warranty, snow on the first day it runs tires. $14,700. to make sure it is cor541-419-6057 rect. Sometimes instructions over the Porsche 911 Carrera phone are misunder1984, platinum metallic, stood and an error $14,900, looks & runs can occur in your ad. great, custom sound If this happens to your system, 178K mi, ad, please contact us 541-383-2440. the first day your ad appears and we will PORSCHE 914 1974, Roller (no engine), be happy to fix it as lowered, full roll cage, soon as we can. 5-pt harnesses, racDeadlines are: Weeking seats, 911 dash & days 12:00 noon for instruments, decent next day, Sat. 11:00 shape, very cool! a.m. for Sunday; Sat. $1699. 541-678-3249 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, Saab 9-3 SE 1999 please call us: convertible, 2 door, 541-385-5809 Navy with black soft The Bulletin Classified top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929.

Chevrolet Camaro 1996,

V6, 135K mi, recent tune-up. $2600 obo. 541-408-7134, lv msg Chrysler 300C, 2006. loaded, only 6,000 miles, health forces sale, call for details, 541-420-6215 Infiniti I30 Limited 1999, 4 dr. luxury car, leather & woodgrain interior, power windows & seats, side airbags, Bose sound system, sunroof, 3.0 L V6, must see! $6000 obo. 541-350-4779

Say “goodbuy” to that unused Mitsubishi 3000 GT item by placing it in 1999, auto., pearl The Bulletin Classiieds white, very low mi. $9500. 541-788-8218.

541-385-5809 Buick Lucerne CX 2006, 65K, 3.8 V6, cloth interior, 30mpg hwy, $7500. Buick Park Avenue 1992, leather, 136K, 28 mpg hwy. $2500. Bob, 541-318-9999 Ask me about the Free Trip to Washington, D.C. for WWII Veterans.

Need to sell a Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers 541-385-5809

Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am to 5:00pm • Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 5:00pm • Saturday 10:00am - 12:30pm

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Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subject to FRAUD. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

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Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE Budget Hearing: A meeting of the Central and Eastern Oregon Juvenile Justice Consortium (CEOJJC) will be held at 2:00 pm (PDT) on June 21, 2012, at the CEOJJC Office, 62910 OB Riley Rd, #208. Bend, OR 97701. The purpose of the meeting is to hear and adopt the budget, as approved by the budget committee, for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2012. This is a public meeting where any person may appear for or against any item in the budget document, which is available at the CEOJJC office, phone 541-388-6408. Chair of the governing body is Staci Erickson, phone 541-523-8215. LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Application for Allocation of Conserved Water File CW-75 The Water Resources Department (WRD) has received an application for an Allocation of Conserved Water (ACW) pursuant to ORS 537.455-500 and OAR 690-018. The review will consider whether the diversion for the uses allowed under the original water right will be reduced by the conservation project; whether existing water rights will be protected from injury and whether the project is in compliance with local comprehensive land use plans. On 4/17/2012 North Unit Irrigation District filed an ACW Application. The Department designated the application as CW-75. The Applicant proposes to conserve Deschutes River and Crooked River water by lining approximately 5-miles

Legal Notices y of canal. The project is expected to yield approximately 7,880 acre feet of conserved water from the Deschutes River under Water Right Certificates 72279 and 72280 with a priority of 2/28/1913. The project will also conserve Crooked River Water by reducing demand on the Applicant's Crooked River Water Rights under Water Right Certificates 72283 and 72284 with 9/18/1968 priority. It is proposed that 100% of the conserved water will be protected instream in the Crooked River. Any party may provide written comments directly related to CW-75 by 6/10/2012 or within 20 days of the last date of newspaper publication. Comments should be sent to Kody Thurgood, WRD, 725 Summer Street NE, Salem, OR 97301. Comments may be faxed to 503-986-0903. WRD will review all comments received when determining whether to approve the proposed ACW Application. A copy of the application and other information on the allocation and use of conserved water may be obtained from the Department by contacting Mr. Thurgood at 503-986-0892 or thurgokj@state.or.us. LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC AUCTION Public auction to be held Saturday, June 30, 2012 at 1:30 P.M., at Jamison Street Self Storage, 63177 Jamison St., Bend OR 97701. (Unit B-123, Parilee McCracken).

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Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE The regular meeting of the Board of Directors of the Deschutes County Rural Fire Protection District #2 will be held on Tuesday, June 12, 2012 at 11:30 a.m. at the conference room of the North Fire Station, 63377 Jamison St., Bend, OR. It will be a budget hearing to approve the 2012-2013 budget. Other items on the agenda include: an update on Project Wildfire, the fire department report, and a grant request from Deschutes River Wood. The meeting location is accessible to persons with disabilities. A request for interpreter for the hearing impaired or for other accommodations for person with disabilities should be made at least 48 hrs. before the meeting to: Tom Fay 541-318-0459. TTY 800-735-2900. PUBLIC SEALED BID AUCTION The contents of ten storage units will be sold at a sealed bid, cash-only, auction on Saturday, June 16 beginning at 10am at Prineville Self Storage, 1350 Harwood Street, Prineville. Public is welcome. Contact clarkstorages@yahoo.com for information. No phone calls please.

Garage Sales

Garage Sales

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classiieds!

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

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PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

File No. 8324.20018 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by File No. 7431.20296 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Edward H. Torcom and Donna K. Torcom, as tenants by the entirety husRebecca C. Vallie, as grantor, to Western Title & Escrow, as trustee, in faband and wife, as grantor, to Harris Trust and Savings Bank, as trustee, in vor of Columbia River Bank Mortgage Group, as beneficiary, dated favor of Harris Trust and Savings Bank, as beneficiary, dated 03/31/05, 06/21/03, recorded 06/30/03, in the mortgage records of Deschutes recorded 04/01/05, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, County, Oregon, as 2003-43707 and subsequently assigned to Freedom as 2005-19635 covering the following described real property situated in Mortgage Corporation by Assignment recorded as 2005-41476, covering said county and state, to wit: the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 2, in Cinder Butte Estates West, Deschutes County, Oregon. Lot 43, Justin Glen, Phase III, Deschutes County, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3124 Northwest Lynch Lane Redmond, OR 97756 PROPERTY ADDRESS: 804 Northwest Poplar Avenue Redmond, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to satisfy the loan has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the upon maturity beginning on 04/01/2012 (Payment Default as of 4/1/2011) default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when and pay the following sums: principal balance of $457,000.00 with acdue the following sums: monthly payments of $871.63 beginning 01/01/11; crued interest from 03/01/2011; Plus lenders fees and costs of $210.00; plus late charges of $31.72 each month beginning 01/16/11; plus prior acPlus prior accrued late charges of $2,353.82; together with title expense, crued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,488.45; together with costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepaythe protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said said sums being the following, to wit: principal balance of $457,000.00 sums being the following, to wit: $105,241.07 with interest thereon at the with interest thereon at the note rate of 5.375 percent per annum beginrate of 4.75 percent per annum beginning 12/01/10; plus late charges of ning 03/01/2011; Plus lenders fees and costs of $210.00; Plus prior ac$31.72 each month beginning 01/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late crued late charges of $2,353.82; together with title expense, costs, charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,488.45; together with title expense, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepaypenalties/premiums, if applicable. ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on August 27, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the stanAugust 31, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside dard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physi"Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestinformation is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. trustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perfortrust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes re- Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inis secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorpoauction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northrated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, please contact: Nanci Lambert Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Torcom, Edward H. and Donna K. (TS# 8324.20018) 1002.214334-File No. Publication Dates: May 27, June 3, 10 and 17, 2012. 1002.214334

For further information, please contact: Winston Khan Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Vallie, Rebecca C. (TS# 7431.20296) 1002.214329-File No. Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.214329

File No. 7023.98722 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 SUZANNE M. HANSEN, A SINGLE PERSON, as grantor, to FIDELITY Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices NATIONAL TITLE INS CO, as trustee, in favor of WELLS FARGO HOME MORTGAGE, INC, as beneficiary, dated 08/12/02, recorded 08/16/02, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2002-44574 and modified by 2007-08578 on 02/09/2007, covering the following dePUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: A leasehold TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE as created by that certain Residential Ground Lease Agreement, dated July 17, 2002, recorded August 16, 2002 as Document No. 2002-44573, File No. 7777.18033 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by File No. 7023.100461 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Mark S. Capps, as grantor, to Fidelity National Title Insurance Company, Official Records, and amended by Amendment to Leases and Deeds of Tina Bryant and Greg Bryant, as Tenants by the entirety, as grantor, to as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated Trust, recorded February 9, 2007, Document No. 2007-08578, between Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Financial Oregon, Inc., as 04/24/06, recorded 05/01/06, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES Golfside Investments, LLC, an Oregon limited liability company, Lessor, beneficiary, dated 05/25/06, recorded 06/01/06, in the mortgage records of County, Oregon, as 2006-29807, covering the following described real and Suzanne M. Hansen Lessee, for the term and upon and subject to all Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2006-38210, covering the following deproperty situated in said county and state, to wit: terms and provisions thereof, of the following described property: scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 19, GOLFSIDE PARK PUD, City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon

Lot Eight (8), Rock Crest, Deschutes County, Oregon.

Lot 75, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top-Phase 1, Deschutes County, Oregon.

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 61055 PARRELL ROAD #20 BEND, OR 97702-2503

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1345 NW CANYON DR REDMOND, OR 97756

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2483 NW Hosmer Lake Drive Bend, OR 97701

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $518.24 beginning 11/01/11; plus late charges of $20.02 each month beginning 11/16/11; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $118.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $52,705.13 with interest thereon at the rate of 7 percent per annum beginning 10/01/11; plus late charges of $20.02 each month beginning 11/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $118.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on August 17, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,610.42 beginning 05/01/11; plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 05/16/11; plus prior accrued late charges of $1,046.76; plus advances of $50.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $323,455.62 with interest thereon at the rate of 3.5 percent per annum beginning 04/01/11; plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 05/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $1,046.76; plus advances of $50.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 13, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $2,081.94 beginning 01/01/12; plus late charges of $104.10 each month beginning 01/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $45.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $391,893.96 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.375 percent per annum beginning 12/01/11; plus late charges of $104.10 each month beginning 01/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $45.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 6, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 HANSEN, SUZANNE M. (TS# 7023.98722) 1002.213295-File No.

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 BRYANT, TINA L. and GREGORY C. AKA GREG (TS# 7777.18033) 1002.215519-File No.

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 CAPPS, MARK S. (TS# 7023.100461) 1002.215033-File No.

Publication Dates: May 20, 27, June 3 and 10, 2012. 1002.213295

Publication Dates: June 10, 17, 24 and July 1, 2012. 1002.215519

Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.215033


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 E7

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

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PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

File No. 7023.100437 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by File No. 7023.100419 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Timothy G. Montgomery and Kimberly D. Montgomery, husband and wife, Tessie M Michelsen and Michael H Price, wife and husband, as grantor, to as grantor, to Fidelity National Title Ins Co, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fidelity National Title Ins Co, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, 1000 1000 1000 Fargo Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated 10/01/08, recorded 10/07/08, in N.A., as beneficiary, dated 05/03/06, recorded 05/10/06, in the mortgage the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2008-40991, records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2006-32540, covering the Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices covering the following described real property situated in said county and following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: state, to wit: The Northerly forty-five (45) feet of lot eighteen (18), and the PUBLIC NOTICE Lot Eight (8), Block Three (3), South thirty-five (35) feet of lot nineteen (19), in block one hundred TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Brookside, recorded March 31, 1978, in Cabinet B, Page 427, nineteen (119), first addition to Bend Park, City of Bend, File No. 7023.100139 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Deschutes County, Oregon. Deschutes County, Oregon. Michael J. Carter SR. and Molly C. Carter, as tenants by the entirety, as grantor, to Fidelity National Title Insurance Company, as trustee, in favor PROPERTY ADDRESS: PROPERTY ADDRESS: of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated 02/11/10, recorded 63371 VOGT ROAD BEND, OR 97701-8523 653 NE 12TH ST BEND, OR 97701 03/05/10, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2010-09570, covering the following described real property situated in said Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to county and state, to wit: satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the Commencing at the Southeast corner of North 1/2 of the Northeast 1/4 default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,057.04 beginning due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,166.97 beginning of Section 8, Township 22 South, Range 10 East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon; thence West, on the South line of said tract, 01/01/12 and $1,036.06 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $44.43 01/01/12 and $1,172.68 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $46.90 each month beginning 01/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $88.86; each month beginning 01/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.90; 1980 feet to the point of beginning; thence North, parallel to the East line of said tract, 683.04 feet; thence West to the U.S. Forest Boundary; plus advances of $27.04; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees plus advances of $15.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees thence South, along said boundary line, 682.37 feet to the and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further Southeast corner of said tract; thence East; along the South line of sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above desums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above desaid tract, 668.50 feet to the point of beginning; Save and Except; scribed real property and its interest therein; and prepayment scribed real property and its interest therein; and prepayment beginning at the Southwest corner of the Northwest 1/4 of the penalties/premiums, if applicable. penalties/premiums, if applicable. Northeast 1/4 of said Section 8; thence North 00 degrees 37' 39" West, By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said along the West line of the Northwest 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4, 359.32 feet; thence South 89 degrees 54' 18" East, 668.87 feet to the Westerly sums being the following, to wit: $140,477.36 with interest thereon at the sums being the following, to wit: $155,908.93 with interest thereon at the right-of way of Read Road; thence South 00 degrees 33' 40" East, rate of 6.125 percent per annum beginning 12/01/11; plus late charges of rate of 6.625 percent per annum beginning 12/01/11; plus late charges of 360.00 feet to the South line of the Northwest 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4; $44.43 each month beginning 01/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late $46.90 each month beginning 01/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late thence North 89 degrees 50' 48" West, along the South line of the charges of $88.86; plus advances of $27.04; together with title expense, charges of $0.90; plus advances of $15.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said Northwest 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4, 668.50 feet to the point of beginning; Also save and except any portion lying within the limits of public roads. default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepaythe above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayPROPERTY ADDRESS: ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. 51945 READ LOOP LA PINE, OR 97739-9466 WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on August 31, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the stanAugust 31, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside dard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,568.32 beginning property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the 01/01/12 and $1,583.08 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $63.40 execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the each month beginning 01/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a penalties/premiums, if applicable. written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physi"Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physi- By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt sums being the following, to wit: $220,860.54 with interest thereon at the requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in rate of 5.375 percent per annum beginning 12/01/11; plus late charges of this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no $63.40 each month beginning 01/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestinformation is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestdefault; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of trustee.com. trustee.com. the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, penalties/premiums, if applicable. at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on August 27, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perfortrust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perforreal property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and ORS 86.753. ORS 86.753. the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes re- Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes retrustee. ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inis secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inrequested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorpoauction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporecord legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive rated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northrated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northinformation concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. For further information, please contact: For further information, please contact: Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, Kathy Taggart Kathy Taggart at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such MONTGOMERY, TIMOTHY G. and KIMBERLY D. MICHELSEN-PRICE, TESSIE M. and PRICE, MICHAEL H. portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) (TS# 7023.100437) 1002.214442-File No. (TS# 7023.100419) 1002.214359-File No. and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.214442 Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.214359 trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, PUBLIC NOTICE together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE PUBLIC NOTICE provided by said ORS 86.753. TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes File No. 7023.100723 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will Deri L. Frazee, Steven Summerfield, Lucinda Summerfield, as grantor, to File No. 7023.100131 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the Fidelity National Title Insurance Company, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fred Frazier and Karen Frazier, husband and wife, as grantor, to Fidelity terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular National Title Ins Co, as trustee, in favor of Well Fargo Bank, N.A., as Fargo Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated 07/10/06, recorded 07/14/06, in includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to beneficiary, dated 10/03/05, recorded 10/05/05, in the mortgage records of the mortgage records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2006-48272, the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 200568011, covering the following decovering the following described real property situated in said county and performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: state, to wit: "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at Lot Twenty-Five (25) in Block Three (3) of Crest Ridge Estates, Lot 8 in Block 2 of Loe Brothers Town N' Country Second Addition, www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You Deschutes County, Oregon. City of Sisters, Deschutes County, Oregon. may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. PROPERTY ADDRESS: PROPERTY ADDRESS: 6950 NW LARCH COURT REDMOND, OR 97756 222 W BLACK CRATER AVE SISTERS, OR 97759-1499 For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the CARTER, MICHAEL J. SR. and MOLLY C. default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when (TS# 7023.100139) 1002.213939-File No. due the following sums: monthly payments of $2,440.07 beginning due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,766.11 beginning 01/01/12 and $2,440.52 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $106.72 Publication Dates: May 27, June 3, 10 and 17, 2012. 1002.213939 02/01/12 and $1,759.13 beginning 03/01/12; plus late charges of $70.36 each month beginning 01/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; each month beginning 02/16/12; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above desums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment scribed real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $324,772.54 with interest thereon at the sums being the following, to wit: $196,219.92 with interest thereon at the rate of 6 percent per annum beginning 12/01/11; plus late charges of rate of 7 percent per annum beginning 01/01/12; plus late charges of $106.72 each month beginning 01/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late $70.36 each month beginning 02/16/12 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, charges of $0.00; plus advances of $30.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepaythe above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 4, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the September 13, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: instandard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, side the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at pubin the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real lic auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physi"Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestinformation is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. trustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perfortrust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes re- Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inis secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorpoauction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northrated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Call 541-385-5809

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 FRAZEE, DERI L. and SUMMERFIELD, STEVEN and LUCINDA (TS# 7023.100723) 1002.215530-File No. Publication Dates: June 10, 17, 24 and July 1, 2012. 1002.215530

For further information, please contact: Kathy Taggart Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 FRAZIER, KAREN and FRED (TS# 7023.100131) 1002.214785-File No. Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.214785


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED • 541-385-5809

E8 SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN 1000

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PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

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File No. 7037.91857 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by LEGAL NOTICE Darin P Klarr and, Shelby L Klarr, as grantor, to Western Title Company, INVITATION TO BID as trustee, in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, FA, as beneficiary, dated Request for Proposals (RFP) 04/06/06, recorded 04/13/06, in the mortgage records of Deschutes File No. 7763.29283 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by County, Oregon, as 2006-25156 covering the following described real Sealed proposals for the controlled drilling/blasting and aggregate crushJohn J. Slivkoff and Nadia Slivkoff, as tenants by the entirety, as grantor, property situated in said county and state, to wit: ing at the Crook County Landfill project, will be received until 3:00 p.m. on to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, FA, as benTuesday, July 31, 2012. Each proposal must be enclosed in a sealed eneficiary, dated 09/13/06, recorded 09/15/06, in the mortgage records of Unit No. 32, CEDAR CREEK TOWNHOMES, A CONDOMINIUM, velope and delivered on or before the deadline to the Crook County Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2006-63003, covering the following deDeschutes County, Oregon, described in and subject to that certain Courthouse, 300 N.E. 3rd Street, Room 10, Prineville, Oregon 97754. scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Declaration of Unit Ownership for Cedar Creek Townhomes, a Crook County Judge, Mike McCabe, is designated as the person to reCondominium, Stage IV, recorded November 19, 1990, in Book 223, ceive bids. The bid opening will take place at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, Lot Twelve (12), Ammon Estates, Page 1167, Official Records, and amended by Supplemental Declaration August 1, 2012, at the Crook County Administration Office, 300 N.E. Third Deschutes County, Oregon of Unit Ownership for Cedar Creek Townhomes, a Condominium Stages Street, Room 10, Prineville, Oregon. Final award will be announced durI and II recorded November 9, 1989, in Book 196, Page 801, ing County Court at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, August 15, 2012. First-tier PROPERTY ADDRESS: Official Records, together with the limited and general common elements subcontractor disclosure will be required by 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, July 15774 Dawn Road La Pine, OR 97739 as set forth and described therein appertaining to said unit. 31, 2012. There is a mandatory pre-bid meeting to be held at 10:00 a.m., Thursday, June 21, 2012, at the project site, Crook County Landfill, 5601 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to PROPERTY ADDRESS: Houston Lake Road, Prineville, Oregon 97754. satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default 1050 Northeast Butler Market Road #Unit 32 Bend, OR 97701-0000 has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the The work contemplated consists of providing all materials and labor necdefault for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when essary for surveying, clearing and grubbing, subgrade finish preps, condue the following sums: monthly payments of $772.31 beginning 11/01/10; Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default trolled drilling/blasting of approximately 254,000 cubic yards of materials plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 11/16/10; plus prior achas been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the (hard rock and overburden) to excavate Cell 5 to the specifications incrued late charges of $85.47; plus advances of $0.00; together with title default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when cluded in the County's RFP. The scope of this project is to achieve expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by readue the following sums: monthly payments of $777.74 beginning 08/01/11; smooth unfractured back slopes, production blasting to facilitate excavason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 08/16/11; plus prior action for a landfill cell site to create a subgrades for geosynthetic material protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; crued late charges of $194.45; plus advances of $0.00; together with title that will be used to line the landfill and to provide aggregate for the Crook and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reaCounty Road Department. The County prefers to compensate the conBy reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the son of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the tractor in aggregate in lieu of cash for the excavation of the landfill cell. obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; Payment to the contractor for aggregate crushing is anticipated as part of sums being the following, to wit: $173,166.67 with interest thereon at the and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. the proposal to provide aggregate to the Crook County Road Department. rate of 3.353 percent per annum beginning 10/01/10; plus late charges of $0.00 each month beginning 11/16/10 until paid; plus prior accrued late By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said Complete bidding documents may be obtained from Crook County Adcharges of $85.47; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, sums being the following, to wit: $118,953.65 with interest thereon at the ministration Office, 300 N.E. Third Street, Room 10, Prineville, Oregon costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said rate of 6.125 percent per annum beginning 07/01/11; plus late charges of 97754. Phone: (541) 447 6555, or email requests to: default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of $0.00 each month beginning 08/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late colleen.ferguson@co.crook.or.us. the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepaycharges of $194.45; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, ment penalties/premiums, if applicable. costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said Each proposal must be submitted in accordance with the County's written WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of RFP and accompanied by a cashier's check, certified check, irrevocable September 10, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayletter of credit or bid bond, payable to Crook County, in an amount not less standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inment penalties/premiums, if applicable. than ten percent (10%) of the amount bid. side the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public September 6, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the Penny Keller, Roadmaster, Crook County Road Department, 1306 N. auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inMain, Prineville, Oregon 97754, phone: (541) 447-4644, is designated as property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the side the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, the person to whom all inquiries regarding rock crushing and stockpiling execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public must be directed; and Leroy Gray, Crook County Landfill Manager, 5601 grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real Houston Lake Road, Prineville, Oregon 97754, phone (541) 447 2398, is the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the designated as the person to whom all inquiries about the excavation and costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the blasting must be directed. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the Crook County reserves the right to accept the proposal and award the written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. contract to the lowest responsible bidder, which is in the best interests of "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physithe County, to postpone the acceptance of proposals received and the cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a award of the contract for a period not to exceed thirty (30) days, or to rerequested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's ject any and all proposals received and further advertise for bids. this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physirecord legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive cal offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt No proposals shall be received or considered by the County unless the information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in bidder is registered with the Construction Contractor's Board and/or liinformation is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestthis notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no censed by the State Landscape Contractor's Board as required by ORS trustee.com. record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive 671.530. The bidder must identify whether it is a resident bidder underNotice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid ORS 279C.365(h). at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwestthis foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by trustee.com. Prevailing wage rates for public works contracts in Oregon are required for payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such this project (subject toORS279C.800 to 279C.870) portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of 1000 1000 1000 this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perforportion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or PUBLIC NOTICE trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the perforTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE ORS 86.753. mance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes reactually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with File No. 8771.20001 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said Aspen Sons, LLC, an Oregon Limited Liability Company, as grantor, to honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms ORS 86.753. American Title Insurance Company, as trustee, in favor of LaSalle Bank of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes reNational Association, a national banking association, as beneficiary, dated plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor ceived less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be 01/31/07, recorded 02/08/07, in the mortgage records of Deschutes as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms County, Oregon, as 2007-08227 and subsequently assigned to RI - Bend, is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inof the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the LLC, a California Limited Liability Company by Assignment recorded as clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor 2012-010661, covering the following described real property situated in auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorpoas well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which said county and state, to wit: rated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northis secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" inwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. clude their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of Fee Parcel: A portion of the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorpo(NW1/4SW1/4) of Section Four (4), Township Eighteen (18) South, For further information, please contact: rated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northRange Twelve (12) East of the Willamette Meridian, Heather L. Smith westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Deschutes County, Oregon, being more particularly described as follows: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. Commencing at the Northwest corner of Lot Five (5) in Block One Hundred P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 For further information, please contact: Thirty (130) of Bend Park Second Addition, filed as CS05642 in Slivkoff Jr., John J. and Nadia Heather L. Smith Deschutes County Surveyor's Official Records; thence North 89 degrees (TS# 7763.29283) 1002.215595-File No. Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. 55'56" East along the North line of said Lot 5 a distance of 38.24 feet to P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING" also being the Publication Dates: June 10, 17, 24 and July 1, 2012. 1002.215595 Klarr, Darin P and Shelby L point of beginning; thence South 00 degrees 02'43" East, parallel with (TS# 7037.91857) 1002.215166-File No. the West line of said Lot 5, a distance of 127.50 feet to a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 89 degrees Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.215166 55'56" West 188.16 feet to a point of the East right-of-way line of SE Third Street; thence along said East right-of-way line South 00 degrees PUBLIC NOTICE 11'06" East 199.83 feet to a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 89 degrees 55'56" East 222.00 feet PUBLIC NOTICE File No. 7021.11508 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by to a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Richard H Keeble, as grantor, to Fidelity National Title Insurance Co, as South 00 degrees 04'04" East 26.00 feet to a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely File No. 7345.25985 Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 89 degrees 55'56" East 208.00 feet Barbara Jaques, unmarried, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of as nominee for Countrywide Bank, FSB, it's successors and assigns, as to a point on the centerline of vacated Fourth Street, said point being JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., as beneficiary, dated 10/31/08, recorded beneficiary, dated 12/06/07, recorded 12/19/07, in the mortgage records of marked by a 5/8" rebar with a cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; 11/05/08, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as DESCHUTES County, Oregon, as 2007-64708 and subsequently asthence along said centerline North 00 degrees 21'15" East 353.34 feet 2008-44548 and subsequently assigned to Federal National Mortgage As- to the South right-of-way line of Wilson Avenue marked by a 5/8" rebar with signed to Bank of America, N.A., Successor by Merger to BAC Home sociation ("FNMA"), covering the following described real property situ- a cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence along said South right-of-way Loans Servicing, LP FKA Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP by Asated in said county and state, to wit: line South 89 degrees 55'56" West 244.60 feet to the point of beginning. signment, covering the following described real property situated in said TOGETHER WITH those portions of vacated Taft Avenue, vacated county and state, to wit: Lot One Hundred Fifty-five (155), FOXBOROUGH-PHASE 3, Fourth Street, and the vacated alley accruing to said property. recorded August 28, 2002, in Cabinet F, Page 243, EASEMENT PARCEL 1: An easement for ingress and egress contained Lot 2 Twenty-two (22), Block D, Deschutes River Woods, Deschutes County, Oregon. in Instrument Recorded April 14, 1978, in Book 271, Page 585, Deschutes County, Oregon. Deed Records. EASEMENT PARCEL 2: An easement contained in PROPERTY ADDRESS: Instrument Recorded February 28, 2005, in Volume 2005, Page 11810, PROPERTY ADDRESS: 20627 Wild Goose Lane Bend, OR 97702 Deschutes County Records. 19411 Seminole Circle Bend, OR 97702 PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,026.62 beginning 11/01/11; plus late charges of $42.98 each month beginning 11/16/11; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $107,834.16 with interest thereon at the rate of 5.875 percent per annum beginning 10/01/11; plus late charges of $42.98 each month beginning 11/16/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on August 20, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1,154.16 beginning 11/01/11; plus late charges of $57.71 each month beginning 11/15/11; plus prior accrued late charges of ($57.71); plus advances of $155.01; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $178,404.92 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.375 percent per annum beginning 10/01/11; plus late charges of $57.71 each month beginning 11/15/11 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of ($57.71); plus advances of $155.01; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 7, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $26,164.41 beginning 03/01/10; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $4,186,376.00 with interest thereon at the rate of 6 percent per annum beginning 02/01/10; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on September 5, 2012 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with that statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid information is also available at the trustee's website, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.753 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com.

For further information, please contact: Winston Khan Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Keeble, Richard H. (TS# 7021.11508) 1002.213311-File No.

For further information, please contact: Nanci Lambert Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Jaques, Barbara (TS# 7345.25985) 1002.215249-File No.

For further information, please contact: Nanci Lambert Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 (425)586-1900 Aspen Sons, LLC (TS# 8771.20001) 1002.215208-File No.

Publication Dates: May 20, 27, June 3 and 10, 2012. 1002.213311

Publication Dates: June 10, 17, 24 and July 1, 2012. 1002.215249

PROPERTY ADDRESS: 694 Southeast 3rd Street Bend, OR 97702

Publication Dates: June 3, 10, 17 and 24, 2012. 1002.215208


OPINION&BOOKS

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Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3 Books, F4-6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

DAVID BROOKS

The true moral diet

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n the 1970s, the gift shop at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts was an informal affair. It was staffed by about 300 mostly elderly volunteers, and there were cash drawers instead of registers. The problem was that of the shop’s $400,000 in annual revenue, somebody was stealing $150,000. Dan Weiss, the gift shop manager at the time who is now the president of Lafayette College, investigated. He discovered that there wasn’t one big embezzler. Bunches of people were stealing. Dozens of elderly art lovers were each pilfering a little. That’s one of the themes of Dan Ariely’s new book “The (Honest) Truth about Dishonesty.” Nearly everybody cheats, but usually only a little. Ariely and his colleagues gave thousands of people 20 number problems. When they tackled the problems and handed in the answer sheet, people got an average of four correct responses. When they tackled the problems, shredded their answers sheets and self-reported the scores, they told the researchers they got six correct responses. They cheated a little, but not a lot. That’s because most of us think we are pretty wonderful. We can cheat a little and still keep that “good person” identity. Ariely, who is one of the most creative social scientists on the planet, invented other tests to illustrate this phenomenon. He put cans of Coke and plates with dollar bills in the kitchens of college dorms. People walked away with the Cokes, but not the dollar bills, which would have felt more like stealing. Ariely points out that we are driven by morality much more than standard economic models allow. But I was struck by what you might call the Good Person Construct and the moral calculus it implies. For the past several centuries, most Westerners would have identified themselves fundamentally as Depraved Sinners. In this construct, sin is something you fight like a recurring cancer — part of a daily battle against evil. But these days, people are more likely to believe in their essential goodness. People who live by the Good Person Construct try to balance their virtuous self-image with their selfish desires. They try to manage the moral plusses and minuses and keep their overall record in positive territory. In this construct, moral life is more like dieting: I give myself permission to have a few cookies because I had salads for lunch and dinner. I give myself permission to cheat a little because, when I look at my overall life, I see that I’m still a good person. The Good Person isn’t shooting for perfection any more than most dieters are following their diet 100 percent. It’s enough to be workably suboptimal, a tolerant, harmless sinner and a generally good guy. Obviously, though, there’s a measurement problem. You can buy a weight scale to get an objective measure of your diet. But you can’t buy a scale of virtues to put on the bathroom floor. And given our awesome capacities for rationalization and self-deception, most of us are going to measure ourselves leniently. The key job in the Good Person Construct is to manage your rationalizations and self-deceptions to keep them from getting egregious. Ariely suggests you reset your moral gauge from time to time. Your moral standards will gradually slip as you become more and more comfortable with your own rationalizations. So step back. Next time you feel tempted by something, recite the Ten Commandments. A small triggering nudge at the moment of temptation, Ariely argues, is more effective than an epic sermon meant to permanently transform your whole soul. I’d add that you really shouldn’t shoot for goodness, which is so vague and forgiving. You should shoot for rectitude. We’re mostly unqualified to judge our own moral performances, so attach yourself to some exterior or social standards. A final thought occurred to me. As we go about doing our Good Person moral calculations, it might be worth asking: Is this good enough? Is this life of minor transgressions refreshingly realistic, given our natures, or is it settling for mediocrity? — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa’s column will return.

Deadly relief brutal sport in a

• Records show Derek Boogaard had easy access – legal and illegal – to the painkillers and sleeping pills attributed in his fatal overdose, despite a known history of addiction By John Branch • New York Times News Service

I

n his final three seasons playing in the National Hockey League, before dying last year at 28 of an accidental overdose of narcotic painkillers and alcohol, Derek Boogaard received more than 100 prescriptions for thousands of pills from more than a dozen team doctors for the Minnesota Wild

and the New York Rangers. A trove of documents, compiled by Boogaard’s father, offer a rare prescription-by-prescription history of the care given to a prominent, physically ailing athlete who struggled with addiction to some of the very drugs the team doctors were providing. Among the findings: • In a six-month stretch from October 2008 to April 2009, while playing 51 games, Boogaard received at least 25 prescriptions for the painkillers hydrocodone or oxycodone, a total of 622 pills, from 10 doctors — eight team doctors of the Wild, an oral surgeon in Minneapolis and a doctor for another NHL team. • In the fall of 2010, an official for the Rangers, Boogaard’s new team, was notified of Boogaard’s recurring abuse of narcotic pain pills. Nonetheless, a Rangers team dentist soon wrote the first of five prescriptions for hydrocodone for Boogaard.

• Another Rangers doctor, although aware that Boogaard also had been addicted to sleeping pills in the past, wrote nearly 10 prescriptions for Ambien during Boogaard’s lone season with the team. The records reveal the ease with which Boogaard received prescription drugs — often shortly after sending a text message to a team doctor’s cellphone and without a notation made in team medical files. They also show the breadth of the drugs being prescribed, from flu medications and decongestants to antidepressants and anti-anxiety pills. See Boogaard / F5

“To see him have all that access to those doctors and all those prescriptions, that is mind boggling. He had such easy access to prescription medicines.” — Dr. Louis Baxter Sr., executive medical director, Professional Assistance Program

Left: Minnesota Wild players meet members of Derek Boogaard’s family before the team plays the Calgary Flames at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minn., in November 2011. Above: The Prince George Cougars, a team Boogaard used to play for, at practice in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada, in September 2011. New York Times News Service file photos

BOOKS INSIDE WASHINGTON: President’s library to be recreated, F4

BLOODMAN: Thriller pits antihero against killers, F4

CAROLLA: Actor’s book tells of California homes, F4

COMICS: Characters coming out, marrying, F6


F2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

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The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

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Amphitheater exemption is a good decision

I

n the past 10 years, Les Schwab Amphitheater has established a unique role in entertainment and tourism in Bend.

It has put Bend on the regional concert map and drawn thousands of visitors from out of town. Those visitors have spent their money not only in the Old Mill District, but also in hotels and restaurants and stores throughout the area. For locals, it has brought bigleague entertainment, from the likes of Bob Dylan to Coldplay to The Pixies to Alison Krauss. It’s made Bend the place to be on select summer nights. In voting Thursday to exempt the amphitheater from one aspect of a new sound ordinance, the Bend City Council made the right move. City staff proposed to exempt the amphitheater from daytime noise limits that apply between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. Six of the seven councilors agreed. The amphitheater would need to meet requirements that apply from 10 p.m. to 7 a.m. The amphitheater is not men-

tioned by name in the ordinance, but it is the only facility in the city that would meet the description: “an outdoor amphitheater with a capacity of at least 5,000 people ...� In discussing the possible exemption, councilors noted that the amphitheater — owned by Bill Smith Properties — has worked to be a good neighbor. Amphitheater Director Marney Smith told the board it’s in the amphitheater’s best interests to keep it that way: “If we don’t continue to be good neighbors, our ability to do business as an amphitheater would be impacted.� She added that overly restrictive limits on noise levels could make it difficult to attract national-level talent. The city must walk a careful line in regulating noise, balancing the benefits of an active and vibrant community life against the desires of residents to have peace and quiet in their homes. The choice to give Les Schwab flexibility on daytime noise levels hits the right note.

It is time to rethink crime victims’ rights

T

his week, Oregon Supreme Court Justice Paul De Muniz argued that some of the state’s constitutional rights for crime victims may be effectively worthless because they are so shackled by procedure. De Muniz called for the Legislature to take action. It should. The Oregon Constitution was amended by voters in 1999 to add some rights for crime victims. For instance, a crime victim has “the right to refuse an interview, deposition or other discovery request by the criminal defendant or other person acting on behalf of the criminal defendant� as long as it does not restrict any other constitutional right of the defendant. What does that mean in practice? There is not a lot of case law. As De Muniz wrote in his concurring opinion Thursday, one of the reasons is that three out of the four cases that could have resolved some of those questions in the Oregon Supreme Court have had to be rejected from consideration. The reason: the law’s restrictive deadlines. In one case, the notice of appeal was not served properly to the prosecuting attorney and the attorney general on the same day it was filed with the Oregon Supreme Court. In another case, the Office of Public Defense Services was not noticed properly within one day of filing an appeal. The most recent case involves Thomas Bray, a former Central Oregon Community College instruc-

tor. Bray has been charged with sex offenses out of an incident in February 2011. The victim, who is from Bend, claimed that Bray repeatedly and forcibly raped her. Bray has pleaded not guilty. The court’s opinion says Bray “apparently intends to raise a defense of consent.� The defense argues that the victim was uncertain enough about what happened that she did an Internet search to get a legal definition of rape before contacting police. Bray sought from Google her search records and email concerning Bray. Google declined without a court order or the victim’s consent. The victim declined. The victim also asserted that the request violated her rights as a crime victim under the Oregon constitution. She appealed, challenging several orders of the court. Again in this case, the restrictive deadlines under Oregon law meant the Oregon Supreme Court did not have jurisdiction. The notice of appeal was not filed within seven days after the trial court had issued its order. “The existing scheme for challenging trial court orders involving crime victims’s rights apparently is unnecessarily confusing to the bar and trial bench,� De Muniz wrote. “When constitutional rights are too constrained by procedural limitations, they effectively may become valueless.� The Legislature should take up the issue in its 2013 session.

My Nickel’s Worth Bikes don’t own the road Today on my way home, I stopped at a intersection with a stop sign to let a large group of bicycles with costumes pass. The leader of the group yelled at me to “stay right there, bud.� I was stopped and was willing to wait. They didn’t even stop. I ride a bike myself and I was an advocate of cyclists. I was looking forward to seeing the parade go by. There was absolutely no reason to be so rude and yell like that. Who do they think they are to break traffic laws and be so rude? I never understood why bicycles and cars couldn’t share the road. Now I do, thanks to the disrespect shown to me. The bikes don’t own the road, they share it. Michael Bach Bend

Pipeline threatens bill In this session of Congress, friends of big oil have been making a habit of holding essential legislation hostage in order to hasten construction of the dangerous Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline. It’s happening again now, as Congress takes one more stab at passing a bipartisan transportation bill — a critical piece of infrastructure legislation that is important to our future economic growth and is conservatively estimated to create 1 million jobs. Keystone XL is fraught with flaws, from the destruction of pristine boreal forest ecosystems, to the potential leaks into the Ogallala aquifer along its route. This measure is a poison pill, a gift to big oil that threatens the transportation bill, and could hold up road and transit projects and squash much-needed jobs. Instead of encouraging the production of one the dirtiest, most polluting fuels and sending it through

America’s heartland, Congress should be promoting clean energy solutions. Keystone XL is a devious dagger in the transportation bill that will not bring us closer to energy self-sufficiency, but further line the already bulging pockets of big oil. Doug Butler Bend

Let the letters flow No, John Costa, no way, uh-uh, don’t do it. No fact checking, no editing, no furrowed editorial brow. Just let the letters flow. Of course they outrage me. I am a lifelong reader and like to think I’m fairly well-informed. Twisted facts, obvious bias and narrow thinking appalls me. So what? These are people in your community who wish to vent. Let them! Your general readership is not comprised of children. They don’t need protection from outrageous opinions. Personally, I love the morning lift. It raises my blood pressure, generates fits of swearing, curls my hands into fists. I love it. Don’t change a thing. Besides, thoughtful and insightful letter writers tend to be a bit indolent, requiring an occasional poke with a sharp stick. Some of your letters are indeed sharp sticks. So, let the puerile provokers of purple prose pursue their passion ‌ please! Sorry, I have these fits. They pass. Presumably. Bruce Stevens Redmond

Lower speed near school With the opening of Ridgeview High School, increasing traffic, plus intersecting feeder streets and wildlife and livestock in the area, I feel it is imperative to lower the speed limit to 45 mph on Southwest Helmholtz Way as it is north of state Highway 126.

Also, no passing the entire length to South Canal Boulevard. Each intersecting street from state Highway 126 south to Elkhorn Avenue — e.g., Obsidian, Wickiup and Southwest Coyote avenues — are located on curves, hills or both. As there have been fatalities in years past, it seems prudent to lower the speed limit. Jane Jenkins Redmond

Getting bin Laden In response to Pete Sandgren’s letter June 2: Some comments made are not quite accurate. I love armchair warriors who bloviate about things of which they have no personal knowledge. As I recall, there are three retired SEALs in Bend and Pete ‌ isn’t one of them. To give President Obama any credit, other than saying yes to the raid by my former teammates, is a stretch. I personally know who was tracking bin Laden, which started when Condoleezza Rice pinned on his first star when he was working at the White House for President George W. Bush. The process to track and neutralize bin Laden was not shut down as indicated and some presidents actually don’t stand in front of a teleprompter and divulge sensitive military operations, thus putting our troops in harms way, or use military success to further their own political gain. A true leader would not have his administration (Leon Panetta) draft a memorandum for the record that protects them if an operation goes awry. I prefer a chest pumping commander in chief that inspires and is willing to take the heat if something does go wrong, rather than run for political cover. Bruce Willhite Bend

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Jesus would never condone homosexuality By Dennis Mikesh t is both sad and enlightening to observe how someone — who should, and I am sure does, know better — is willing to use God’s word to suit his own position on a subject instead of letting the scripture speak for itself. I am referring to the May 30 letter by Allen Smyth who, by his own description, is a retired Presbyterian pastor. First, I know that he knows that God is the same God in the New Testament as He is in the Old Testament. He also knows that the Law of Moses was delivered to the Jews, not the rest of humanity. He should also know that the whole purpose of the Old Testament was to usher in the savior of all of humanity, Jesus Christ,

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His son. The Old Testament held no forgiveness for sin and sin was only forgiven with the sacrifice of and the shedding of the blood of animals. Sin, then and now, is exactly the same, except that with the coming of Christ came grace and the forgiveness of sin. That grace and forgiveness didn’t excuse sin, it only made forgiveness of sin contingent on certain very specific conditions, among which were repentance — or being sorry for what one has done (sin) — and making your best effort to not repeat it. Smyth presents the thought about whether Jesus endorsed all of the “grisly� punishments listed in the book of Leviticus. He again neglects to point out that for all intents and

IN MY VIEW purposes, Jesus and the Father are one and — as Jesus has said — a house divided against itself cannot stand. Smyth also refers to the occasion of the woman caught in adultery and how no one would throw the first stone, but neglects to finish the story. Jesus told the woman that the crowd did not condemn her and neither did He bid her to go and sin no more. In fact, Jesus never excused or condoned sin. He, like the Father, hates sin but loves the sinner. Smyth goes on to refer to the Sermon on the Mount and, at this point, it is hard to tell where he is going with

his thought. What Jesus was saying obviously raises the bar. The intent of the heart is — if anything — even more important than the letter of the law, but does not take away the law. Jesus himself said he did not come to abolish the law, but to fulfill the law. The “grisly� punishments of Leviticus show how seriously God feels about sin and the fact that sin deserves nothing less than death. Jesus came to this world, lived under the law and never sinned. He then took the sins of the world on Himself and paid the penalty we all deserve, because we all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. Trying to justify gay marriage by inferring that Jesus, being a man of love, would not condemn it just

doesn’t hold water. It is just this kind of argument that tries to make Christians appear to be homophobes and haters of homosexual people. For a true Christian, nothing could be further from the truth. Jesus taught us to be haters of sin and lovers of the sinner to help them see the error of their ways and to try to help them find Christ and avail themselves of his saving grace. Homosexual practice is condemned in both the Old and The New Testaments. It is never condoned. It is called sin and just like any other sin, it needs to be repented in order to be forgiven. I would pray that Smyth and others would refrain from misusing God’s word to make a point. — Dennis Mikesh lives in Redmond.


SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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arack Obama lately has been accusing presumptive rival Mitt Romney of not waging his campaign in the nice — but losing — manner of John McCain in 2008. But a more marked difference can be seen in Obama himself, whose style and record bear no resemblance to his glory days of four years ago. Recently, the president purportedly has been reassuring Democratic donors that his signature achievement, “Obamacare,” could be readjusted in the second term — something Republicans have promised to do for the last three years. What an evolution: We have gone from being told we would love “Obamacare,” to granting exemptions from it to favored companies, to private assurances to modify it after re-election — all before it was even fully enacted. Obama’s calls for a new civility four years ago are apparently inoperative. The vow to “punish our enemies” and the intimidation of Romney campaign donors are a long way from the soaring speech at Berlin’s Victory Column and “Yes, we can.” Obama once called for a focus on issues rather than personal invective. But now we mysteriously hear again of Romney’s dog, his great-greatgrandfather’s wives, and a roughhousing incident some 50 years ago

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON in prep school. The “hope and change” slogan for a new unity gave way to a new “us versus them” divide. “Us” now means all sorts of targeted appeals to identity groups like African-Americans for Obama, Latinos for Obama, gays for Obamas, greens for Obama, or students for Obama. “Them,” in contrast, means almost everyone else who cannot claim hyphenation or be counted on as a single-cause constituency. In 2008, the Obama strategy was supposedly to unite disparate groups with a common vision; in 2012, it is to rally special interests through common enemies. Remember the Obama who promised an end to the revolving door of lobbyists and special-interest money? Then came the likes of Peter Orszag, who went from overseeing the Obama budget to being a Citigroup grandee, and financial pirate Jon Corzine, who cannot account for more than $1.5 billion of investors’ money but can bundle cash for Obama’s re-election. If you told fervent supporters in 2008 that by early 2012 Obama would set a record for

the most meet-and-greet fundraisers in presidential history, they would have thought it blasphemy. Obama is said to go over every name on his Predator drone targeted-assassination list — a kill tally that is now seven times larger in less than four years than what George W. Bush piled up in eight. Guantanamo is just as open now as it was in 2008. If Obama supporter and former Yale Law School Dean Harold Koh was once accusing President Bush of being “torturer in chief,” he is now an Obama insider arguing that bombing Libya is not really war and that taking out an American citizen and terrorist suspect in Yemen is perfectly legal. Previously bad renditions, preventive detentions and military tribunals are now all good. Some disgruntled conservatives jumped ship in 2008 for the supposedly tightfisted Obama when he called for halving the deficit in four years and derided Bush as “unpatriotic” for adding $4 trillion to the national debt. Yet Obama already has exceeded all the Bush borrowing in less than four years. What accounts for the radical change in mood from four years ago? The blue-state model of large government, increased entitlements and high taxes may be good rhetoric, but

it is unsound reality. Redistribution does not serve static, aging populations in a competitive global world — as we are seeing from California to southern Europe. “Hope and change” was a slogan in 2008; it has since been supplanted by the reality of 40 straight months of 8 percent-plus unemployment and record deficits — despite $5 billion in borrowed priming, near-zero interest rates, and vast increases in entitlement spending. Obama’s bragging of drilling more oil despite, rather than because of, his efforts is supposed to be a clever appeal to both greens and business. Private equity firms are good for campaign donations but bad when a Republican rival runs them. “Romney would do worse,” rather than “I did well,” is the implicit Obama campaign theme of 2012. To be re-elected, a now-polarizing Obama believes that he must stoke the fears of some of us rather than appeal to all of our hopes by defending a successful record, while smearing with the old politics rather than inspiring with the new. That cynical calculation and constant hedging and flip-flopping may be normal for politicians, but eventually it proves disastrous for the ones who posed as messianic prophets.

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t’s time for the next big thing in education, a true revolution in our approach to high school teaching and learning. The vision comes courtesy of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which announced plans last month to offer free online college classes. These prestigious universities are providing a stamp of approval for this use of technology, by joining other institutions in deeming interactive online courses an effective way to advance education — without requiring regularly scheduled meetings of instructors and students. This should trigger a long overdue overhaul in the way high school students are taught. Nearly 30 years ago the Carnegie report, “A Nation at Risk,” warned that American education is failing our country. During the decades since, public K-12 education has tried — largely unsuccessfully — to respond. If anything, the criticisms have increased over the past 10 years, as more and more money has been poured into public education, while international comparisons have pointed to an accelerating decline in American student success. The traditional, antiquated model — 25 to 35 students sitting in tidy rows with a single teacher in the front of the classroom — now can and should be replaced by a blend of interactive online education and face-to-face teacher-student interactions focused upon a motivating curriculum. The timing for this change could not be better. The national common core standards in English and mathematics have been agreed upon as a goal by almost all states.

You would’ve thought that the technological revolution that has changed the world of business and entertainment would have already had a greater impact on schools. So far its impact has largely been limited to providing Advanced Placement courses in smaller, rural communities; computer labs; and the occasional incorporation of laptops into individual classrooms. The most frequent use of classroom technology has been in the area of assessments. While these are all worthy uses of technology, we can and should do a lot more. The substantial costs of K-12 public education and the concern that America’s students aren’t sufficiently competitive with those in other developed nations have resulted in a search for alternatives. Yet two of the most popular ideas — charter schools and using public money to support increased enrollment at private schools through voucher programs — threaten public education itself. What’s more, neither alternative has yet shown consistent improvements in student learning, nor an ability to be implemented on a large scale. For student learning to improve

on a broad basis, it will take changes in instructional methods, not organizational changes. It is what occurs in the classroom that truly matters. This is why we must bring the latest thinking about online education into the public school classroom in a large-scale way. We know that most teenagers are technologically adept — they are primed for this sort of change in learning. We also know that we have an inadequate supply of competent math and science teachers, and that the increasing teacher salaries over the past two decades have not had a significant impact on teacher quality. So here’s one vision for the future. Many high school courses could combine online technology lessons and teacher-directed lessons, with each format occurring on alternating days. The “class size” for the technology directed lesson is theoretically unlimited — each student will have his or her personal laptop. Assessments would be frequent and individualized, with students and class reports generated daily and given to the teachers who meet with traditionally sized classes of students on the alternate day. Teachers would review and highlight the curricular goals detailed by the assessment reports. As important as following up on students’ academic needs, teachers will provide human contact for students of both an academic and personal nature, something online educational programs can never do. The best candidate for a first course to be developed this way is algebra. Almost all eighth- or ninthgraders across the country take it, since algebra is seen as the gateway

The Washington Post

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he Republican-dominated House has passed an amendment to cut off funding for political science research through the National Science Foundation, and you and I should be outraged. It’s not the money, of course: Only $11 million of the NSF’s $7 billionplus budget goes to poli sci research. It’s the principle of the thing. We just can’t let politicians like Jeff Flake — the Republican from Arizona who sponsored the ban — decide what constitutes science worthy of federal support. Or so we are told. Christopher Zorn, a political scientist at Penn State University, writes in a Web posting that it would be “dangerous” if “individual members of Congress should sit in judgment over individual programs of scientific research.” Eleven political science department chairs from blue-chip universities, headed by Nolan McCarty of Princeton, have published a manifesto of their own, bemoaning the loss of “important public benefits” if the House bill ever becomes law. Sorry, guys. I’m just not feeling it.

Why shouldn’t Congress, or its “individual members,” define “science” for purposes of federal funding? That’s what Congress did when it decided in the late 1960s to include political science in the NSF. It horrifies Zorn that Rep. Flake would override the NSF’s “peer review system” and the “hundreds of very smart people” who participate in it. “Politicization of the scientific process,” he cries. I would have thought that the politicization comes from the political science academy’s dependence on federal money in the first place. He who pays the piper calls the tune — and in our democracy, Congress pays the piper. People like Flake, though undoubtedly biased and ideological, are accountable to the voters and taxpayers. Nobody elected those “hundreds of very smart people” who have grown accustomed to distributing the public’s money. As for the great public benefits from NSF-funded political science research, I’m agnostic. Perhaps it was frivolous to spend $301,000 on a study of gender and political ambition among students, as Flake charges. Or perhaps a report on economic

sanctions was a good taxpayer investment, as McCarty and his fellow department chairs insist. The relevant question, however, is whether society could have reaped equal or greater benefits through other uses of the money — and how unreasonable it would be to ask the political scientists to rely on non-federal support. On the first point, the answer is obviously “yes.” Flake’s amendment doesn’t even cut the NSF’s total budget. Rather, it shifts the political science money to other areas, such as physics, engineering and chemistry. As for the second point, Flake notes that most of the poli sci program’s money has gone to universities with endowments of more than $1 billion. If this research is as valuable as its proponents say, someone other than the U.S. Treasury will pay for it. If anything, Flake’s amendment does not go far enough: the NSF shouldn’t fund any social science. The private sector chronically underinvests in basic scientific research; the costs and risks are relatively high, and the benefits relatively hard to commercialize. Government support compensates for this “market failure,” enabling society to

Economic pillars are crumbling

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reap “positive externalities” — economic, environmental or military. Federal funding for mathematics, engineering and other “hard” sciences is appropriate. In these fields, researchers can test their hypotheses under controlled conditions; then those experiments can be repeated by others. Though quantitative methods may rule economics, political science and psychology, these disciplines can never achieve the objectivity of the natural sciences. Those who study social behavior — or fund studies of it — are inevitably influenced by value judgments, left, right and center. And unlike hypotheses in the hard sciences, hypotheses about society usually can’t be proven or disproven by experimentation. Society is not a laboratory. The NSF’s budget includes $247.3 million for social sciences. At a time of trillion-dollar deficits, and possible cuts to defense, food stamps and other vital programs, this is a luxury we can live without. Cut the NSF’s entire social science budget. Use half the savings for hard science and the rest to reduce the deficit. — Charles Lane is a member of The Washington Post’s editorial board.

— Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.

— Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,

to all advanced mathematics. With the implementation of national math standards, most high school algebra courses will look very much the same, no matter where in the country they are offered. This single course, then, has a market of hundreds of thousands of students — a size that should mean the very best teachers and technologists could be well paid to create a super course. Its one-time development cost could be paid by the federal government, a foundation or the private sector — a small investment in America’s future. Real money can be saved through this blend of interactive online and face-to-face education. The alternate-day online course can be organized into much larger class sizes than the current average, and can be supervised by a teaching assistant earning a third or a half of a teacher’s salary. The face-to-face class, led by a teacher, could remain at the current average. This technological revolution must come to public education if America’s children are to be competitive in the global economy. Spending on testing and alternative structures is not the answer — it’s addressing what occurs in the classroom. Our students are ready to embrace interactive online learning, as long as they don’t lose the crucial human element that can be provided by excellent teachers. A revolution spirited by top universities intending to change the way adults learn may well have its greatest impact on America’s high schools. — Marc F. Bernstein is former superintendent of Bellmore-Merrick Central High School District and Valley Stream Central High School District.

Don’t bemoan loss of political science funding Charles Lane

THOMAS FRIEDMAN

ne of the most troubling features of today’s global economic crisis is the lack of political leadership anywhere. No one has the courage to tell people the truth. And the truth is that four of the pillars of today’s global economy — Europe, America, China and the Arab world — have, each in their own way, squandered huge dividends they enjoyed in recent decades and now they have to dig out of their respective holes with fewer resources, less time and more pain. As confronting these hard truths becomes unavoidable, I think we’re likely to see some wild, angry and destabilizing politics that could make the economic recovery even more difficult. Let’s start with Europe. Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal all enjoyed a “German dividend.” That is, they enjoyed German-level interest rates as members of the eurozone, even though they were not as productive or disciplined as German savers and workers were. Instead, they went on real estate or consumption binges that have badly weakened either their banks or their national balance sheets. Now there is no more escaping the bill. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany decried this “missed opportunity” to overhaul their economies in a speech Saturday, as reported by Bloomberg News. Bloomberg quoted Nikolaus Blome, the Bild newspaper’s chief political columnist, as saying that the Greek state “must be rebuilt, like in a developing nation ... And that means leaving the euro.” The Arab world had 50 years of autocratic rule in which leaders from Libya to Yemen could have gradually ordered reforms from the top down. The Arab leaders used their surpluses of power and wealth to ignore the United Nations’ Arab Human Development Report in 2002 — which said they urgently needed to overcome their deficits of freedom, knowledge and women’s empowerment. Instead, they enriched a small slice of their populations and distracted the rest with shiny objects, like Israel or populist Nasserism. Now the Arabs have to dig out of this deep hole with fractured political systems and huge youth populations. Who will tell their people that building competitive economies with modern schools will be a huge challenge? To its credit, China used its huge export dividend to build 21st-century infrastructure and to educate its people, creating a giant middle class. But the current Chinese leadership has not used this surging economic growth to also introduce gradual political reform. Corruption is as bad as ever, institutionalized transparency and rule of law remain weak and consensual politics nonexistent. If growth slows and incomes widen further, more and more steam will build up in that system with no outlet. Without real “political reform,” Wen added, “it’s impossible for China to fully institute economic reform and the gains we have made in these areas may be lost, and new problems ... will not be fundamentally resolved, and such historical tragedies as the Cultural Revolution may happen again in China.” Yikes. As for America, in the 1990s we enjoyed a peace dividend, a dot-com dividend and a low-oil-price dividend, which combined to sharply reduce the federal deficit. But 9/11, two wars accompanied by tax cuts, no tax increases, a Medicare prescription drug plan and a necessary bailout to prevent a potential depression put us more in debt than ever. So for Europe, the Arabs, China and America, in different ways, these have been the years the locusts ate. Getting healthy again will be wrenching for all of us. If I were President Barack Obama, I’d focus my entire campaign now on an effort to reforge a “grand bargain” with Republicans based on a near-term infrastructure stimulus tied with a Simpson-Bowles long-term fiscal rebalancing. At a minimum, it would show that Obama has a sensible plan to fix the economy — which is what people want most from the president — and many in business would surely support it. We cannot wait until January to do serious policy making again. We, and the world, need America to be a rock of stability — now.

Bring the tech revolution to high schools By Marc Bernstein

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

BOOKS

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

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www.bendbulletin.com/books

PRESERVING AMERICAN HISTORY

‘Bloodman’ pits antihero against evil

Publishers Weekly ranks the bestsellers for the week ending June 2. Hardcover fiction 1. “The Storm” by Clive Cussler (Putnam) 2. “11th Hour” by James Patterson (Little, Brown) 3. “Stolen Prey” by John Sandford (Putnam) 4. “Calico Joe” by John Grisham (Doubleday) 5. “The Innocent” by David Baldacci (Grand Central) 6. “Deadlocked” by Charlaine Harris (Ace Books) 7. “A Blaze of Glory” by Jeff Shaara (Ballantine Books) 8. “Bring Up the Bodies” by Hilary Mantel (Henry Holt) 9. “The Wind Through the Keyhole” by Stephen King (Scribner) 10. “In One Person” by John Irving (Simon & Schuster)

“Bloodman” By Robert Pobi (Thomas & Mercer, 428 pgs., $14.95) By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel (South Florida)

Hardcover nonfiction 1. “It Worked for Me” by Colin Powell (Harper) 2. “The Amateur” by Edward Klein (Regnery Publishing) 3. “The Skinny Rules” by Bob Harper (Ballantine) 4. “American Grown” by Michelle Obama (Crown) 5. “You’re So Invited” by Cheryl Najafi (St. Martin’s) 6. “Perfect Pies” by Michele Stuart (Ballantine Books) 7. “Killing Lincoln” by Bill O’Reilly Henry Holt 8. “The Charge” by Brendon Burchard (Free Press) 9. “The Passage of Power” by Robert A. Caro (Knopf) 10. “Cronkite” by Douglas Brinkley (Harper) — McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Russian fantasy authors make clunky debut “The Scar” By Sergey and Marina Dyachenko (Tor, 336 pgs., $24.99) By Lisa McLendon McClatchy Newspapers

Sergey and Marina Dyachenko, husband-andwife authors, have written numerous science-fiction and fantasy novels in Russian — and have racked up a mantel-ful of awards in doing so — but they’ve only now made a foray into U.S. bookshelves with “The Scar.” “The Scar” tells the story of Egert Soll, a handsome and skilled warrior from a noble family, a leader of men, arrogant and self-centered. Always the center of attention, he enjoys the admiration of his men and the affections of a stream of women. He runs into trouble, though, when he spies an unfamiliar woman, a visitor in town. He is captivated by her loveliness, but Toria rebuffs his attentions; she and her fiance are students, traveling for study and devoted to the pursuit of knowledge. Egert ends up killing the fiance, largely unintentionally, in a duel, and a short while later is himself bested in a duel by a mysterious stranger. The stranger spares his life, but marks his cheek with a scar — and his life with a curse. “The Scar” starts quickly, but falls into a languid pace after Egert’s duel — a reflection of Egert’s own lack of energy, perhaps. The pace picks up quite a bit at the end, ultimately moving so quickly that the final scenes feel hurried. There are swords in “The Scar” and there is sorcery. But the novel is far more focused on larger questions of psychology and humanity: The nature of courage and cowardice, the power of forgiveness. And that focus gives it a depth and complexity that mere swordfights and spells alone cannot deliver.

Bill O’Leary / The Washington Post

James Rees, president and chief executive of George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate, Museum and Gardens in Alexandria, Va., is pictured at the manor. Washington’s personal library at Mount Vernon will open in September 2013 and be part of the larger $100 million Fred W. Smith National Library.

Washington’s library to be recreated at Mount Vernon By Lonnae O’Neal Parker The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Gently, gently, the librarian opens the first of the five books displayed on the large wooden table, and age seems to rise up from the pages like a wavy distortion above heated pavement. It’s an English volume, “A New System of Modern Geography,” in its first American printing in 1794, bound in brown leather with marbled paper, and gold gilt along the top edge. On an inside right page is the neatly formal signature of its most famous owner — the first president of the United States. The book has navigational charts and a Copernican model of a suncentered solar system. George Washington read this book, you think, and dusty old history feels immediately present and tactile and shivery. That’s the effect James Rees, president and chief executive of George Washington’s Mount Vernon Estate, Museum and Gardens in Alexandria, Va., was going for when he decided to replicate the first president’s 1,200-volume personal library, book by book. Washington’s personal library is part of the larger $100 million Fred W. Smith National Library, opening September 2013. Named for the benefactor who chairs the Las Vegas-based Reynolds Foundation, which provided a majority of the building’s funding, the 45,000square-foot library will consist of three floors, built into a hillside on a 55-acre portion of Mount Vernon that was once part of Washington’s original farm. It will house historical manuscripts, special collection

“(George Washington’s library has not been replicated) because no one would have thought his library was interesting enough to do it.” — James Rees, president and chief executive, Mount Vernon Estate, Museum and Gardens

photos and memorabilia, and 150 years of Mount Vernon archives. Washington’s original books, which were catalogued before his death, were split among family members after he died. By 1848, most were sold to Henry Stevens, a prominent Massachusetts bookseller. After Stevens announced plans to sell his collection to the British Museum, a Boston and Cambridgebased group purchased the collection and donated it to the Boston Athenaeum, where it remains today. Mount Vernon has fewer than 50 of the original books and 450 duplicate additions — same book, same printing. The rest will hopefully come from the Boston Athenaeum, through purchases or donations, or they will be replicated with pages scanned from the Athenaeum’s collection and put into an 18th-century-style binding with endpaper and leather and gold tooling. Libraries have been replicated before “but it’s not been done for Washington because no one would have thought his library was interesting enough to do it,” Rees says.

The first president was self-conscious about his lack of formal education. He was self-taught. Though the books will eventually be available digitally, Rees hopes scholars and researchers “will eventually be able to stand in this room and look at the library around him. To learn about his personality and likes and dislikes through what he was reading.” He hopes it will lead to a fuller measure of the man and a deeper feel for history. Rees, 60, who calls himself Washington’s public relations agent, has been looking for new ways to study history since he was appointed president of Mount Vernon in 1994. He hadn’t expected to stay this long. Now, on the eve of his retirement, forced upon him by a degenerative brain disease, Rees is mindful of time and how the lessons of one place get telegraphed to another. Washington’s life still offers parables and areas of inquiry, he says. There was his childhood, his religion, “his life was so complicated” and his books speak to that. They include a play by Plutarch, which was a study of ancient Roman leadership, and a history of Cincinnatus, the Roman who quit his farm to become a military leader, then went back to farming. Rees’ favorite is a math book full of complicated drawings Washington owned at 16. Though Washington’s personal library will be open only to researchers, a temporary exhibit, “George Washington: A Reader,” will be housed in Mount Vernon’s museum with some of the original books under glass.

‘Gone Girl’ explores a troubled marriage “Gone Girl” By Gillian Flynn (Crown, 432 pgs., $25) By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel (South Florida)

The intricacies of a marriage — the give and take, the negotiations, the compromises and, it is hoped, the love — are the most private parts of the relationship. What is normal in a household — private jokes, neglected anniversary gifts, little lies — can be, in the wrong circumstances, suspicious and deceptive behavior. That adage of no one knows what goes on behind closed doors moves the plot of “Gone Girl,” Gillian Flynn’s suspenseful psychological thriller. On the surface, Nick and Amy Dunne have a perfect marriage. Yes, they both have lost their jobs: Nick was a movie reviewer for magazine; Amy wrote personality quizzes. And they have had to move from New York City back to Nick’s Missouri hometown to care for his mother who has since died. But they live in a lovely, though rented, mini mansion on the Mississippi River. At least Nick has found work, open-

ing up a bar with his twin sister, “Go,” short for Margo. Then Amy disappears on their fifth anniversary and what some may see as a sublime life begins to crumble. The couple’s individual personalities emerge as “Gone Girl” alternates between Amy’s diary and Nick’s narration. Neither can be counted on to be telling the truth about themselves or their relationship and the cracks emerge. Each knows how to push the other’s buttons, and it is never a pretty sight. The vivacious, smart Amy is obsessed with being perfect and having the kind of soul-mate relationship that her psychologist parents have. Somehow, Amy has never lived up to the Amy at the center of the series of best-selling children’s books written by her parents. Goodguy Nick isn’t quite as innocent, or as nice, as he purports to be, forever fearful that his “father’s rage could rise up” in him anytime. As the spouse, Nick knows that he is the logical suspect in Amy’s disappearance, and apparent murder, and his demeanor seems to suggest his

guilt. He lies quite easily and often to the police, often doesn’t answer his phone, trying to hide a secret life. And then there are his creepy computer searches, her incriminating diary and Amy’s friends — ones he never knew existed — who claim the couple’s marriage was anything but peaceful. Flynn’s unpredictable plot of “Gone Girl” careens down an emotional highway where this couple dissects their marriage with sharp acumen. Flynn easily makes Amy and Nick both sympathetic and unlikable. Empathy for either varies from chapter to chapter as “Gone Girl” shows the disintegration of their marriage. Nick is weak and distant, but Amy may be a sociopath who will go to any lengths to punish a perceived slight. Neither is evil, but their flaws often dominate their personalities, leading to a chilling and surprising finale. Flynn has shown her skills at gripping tales and enhanced character studies since her debut “Sharp Objects,” which garnered an Edgar nod, among other nominations. Her second novel “Dark Places” made numerous best-of lists. “Gone Girl” reaffirms her talent.

The nature of evil, from its origins to how it manifests itself in society and thrives, is a time-honored theme of the mystery genre. Evil kept at arm’s length through the prism of films or novels is horrifying enough. But evil that establishes itself up close and personal can freeze the heart. That battle with the invasion of evil is the foundation of the gripping and chilling “Bloodman” by Canadian author Robert Pobi. “Bloodman” expertly combines the hardboiled novel with the psychological thriller for a strong plot that is terrifyingly real. Jake Cole is a brutal man, a former addict turned FBI consultant. He always is on the verge of destroying himself, but he had “turned a poisonous past around and built . for himself something beautiful.” His salvations are his wife and 3-year-old son and his uncanny ability to find killers. Cole has returned home to Montauk, Long Island, where the moody atmosphere enhances the plot. Jake’s father, Jacob Coleridge Sr., is in the hospital after nearly destroying his home and himself in an Alzheimer-fueled rage. Jake plans to stay only long enough to put Jacob in long-term care. That changes when Jake agrees to help the local sheriff investigate a horrific murder in a nearby beach-front house. Pobi briskly moves to a shocking finale, although a pending hurricane is a device this otherwise strong story did not need. While there are allusions to “The Sixth Sense,” “Shutter Island” and “Silence of the Lambs,” “Bloodman” showcases Pobi’s originality and imagination.

Actor recounts upbringing in San Fernando “Not Taco Bell Material” By Adam Carolla (Crown Archetype, 336 pgs., $25) By Steven Kurutz New York Times News Service

Adam Carolla, the comedian and radio personality, “grew up in a string of semi-bad places,” he said, in the San Fernando Valley in California. He spent his 20s working construction jobs and living in more shoddy homes. So Carolla, 48, had plenty of material to draw on for “Not Taco Bell Material,” his new memoir, which is told through Carolla his home history, with each of the 16 chapters focused on a different residence (purchase price and square footage included). Carolla spoke by phone from his home in Los Angeles, reflecting on old addresses and explaining the relationship between one’s mattress height and level of success. I laughed at the description of your rickety childhood home with its odd pair of front doors. That house was my grandmother’s. It would be cool and funky and retro now. In the ’70s, when everything was made out of space-age polymers, you were a freak if you lived in that old, weird house. Later on, that house got remodeled and I did a seamless patch covering one door and got rid of it forever. You certainly moved around a lot before buying your first home in Hollywood. I was a perpetual renter. House prices had gone up so much. When I was making $11 an hour doing construction, the average price of a home was $250,000. I built custom houses in the hills of Malibu, but that kind of stuff was for Aaron Spelling. My dream was to get a beater deep in the Valley, like in Chatsworth. In the book, you float a theory about mattress height being indicative of one’s success. Can you explain that? My mom had the mattress on the floor. I slept with a futon on the floor. I realized the farther you get from the floor, the better you’re doing. You can actually get too high, though, and be sleeping in bunk beds. I actually took a tape measure to my mattress. It was 30.6 inches off the floor, and that seemed right. Four inches higher or 4 inches lower wouldn’t be a good thing.

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Boogaard Continued from F1 Most striking, though, are the narcotic painkillers and sleeping pills, which Boogaard had a history of abusing. “To see him have all that access to those doctors and all those prescriptions, that is mind-boggling,” said Dr. Louis Baxter Sr., the executive medical director of the Professional Assistance Program of New Jersey and immediate past president of the American Society of Addiction Medicine. “He had such easy access to prescription medicines.” The records paint an incomplete picture. They do not show what Boogaard told doctors or the degree to which he may have misled them. They do not indicate what the doctors knew, if anything, about Boogaard’s pursuit of drugs bought illicitly on his own. They do not reflect whether the doctors knew what other doctors were diagnosing or prescribing. At the least, the records raise questions for hockey and professional sports of all kinds. Do team doctors communicate with one another about the care they are giving or the drugs they are prescribing? Do they demand to see a player before writing a new prescription? Are team medical records monitored and complete? How much information is shared among doctors, team officials and administrators of programs like the NHL’s Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health Program? The NHL, teams, team doctors and substance-abuse program directors involved in Boogaard’s care all declined to discuss any of that. The league, the Wild and the Rangers were given specific examples of the care Boogaard received. Each released two-sentence written statements defending the care and citing the guidance of the league’s Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health program. None of the doctors mentioned in this article would comment. Neither would Dr. Brian Shaw or Dr. David Lewis, co-directors of the Substance Abuse and Behavioral Health program that they founded in 1996 through the NHL and its players association. They took on oversight of Boogaard’s care after he was placed in rehabilitation in 2009, and they oversee similar programs for the National Basketball Association and Major League Soccer.

A player needing help After Boogaard died on May 13, 2011, his family donated his brain to researchers at Boston University. In October, the family learned that Derek had chronic traumatic encephalopathy — or CTE — a brain disease caused by repeated blows to the head. Boogaard’s father, Len, wanted to know more. He has been a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for most of 30 years. He set out on a hunt for documentation of his son’s life and the care he received as things went from bad to worse to unthinkable in Derek’s final years. He requested and received Derek’s medical records from the Wild. The Rangers initially refused, but Boogaard eventually received them through the players association. He asked for records from the private practices of team doctors, too, and received them from most. It seems certain that the records received were not complete. Many were missing pages. One practice’s file did not include a particular doctor who cared for Boogaard extensively. Len Boogaard also obtained pharmacy records for his son through various drugstore chains. They provided storeby-store accounts of Derek Boogaard’s prescriptions. He was sent his son’s drug-test results. He obtained a stack of notes from Derek’s stays at two California rehabilitation clinics. He had hundreds of pages of Derek’s cellphone records. He had Derek’s bank and credit card records, showing everything from fast-food purchases to binges of ATM withdrawals totaling thousands of dollars, believed to be used when Derek bought more painkillers from dealers. Len Boogaard knows that his son supplemented his drug habit with purchases of pills from dealers in Minneapolis; New York; and Regina, Saskatchewan. But he has found no sign of abuse until inju-

New York Times News Service file photo

Aaron Boogaard, the brother of Derek Boogaard — the former NHL hockey player — at the apartment in Minneapolis that he shared with his brother. Derek Boogaard was found dead in the apartment in September 2011.

ries sustained in fights were followed by steady streams of pills provided by team doctors. “Derek was an addict,” Len Boogaard said. “But why was he an addict? Everyone said he had ‘off-ice’ issues. No, it was hockey.” At 7:11 p.m. on the date Derek Boogaard died, about an hour after the Minneapolis police say he was given at least one Percocet — oxycodone and acetaminophen — pill by his brother, Aaron, phone records show Derek called Dan Cronin, a counselor for the league substance-abuse program. The call lasted a minute. Boogaard and Cronin then exchanged seven texts over a 12minute period. Boogaard went barhopping with friends and Aaron that night. Aaron and another brother found Derek’s dead body in his apartment the next afternoon. Len Boogaard later contacted Cronin to ask about the nature of the exchange. Cronin, in an email, cited “privacy rules” and declined to answer Len Boogaard’s questions. He declined to answer questions from The New York Times, too. The Times shared Len Boogaard’s research with several outside experts in the drug and addiction fields. Most were reluctant to comment on Boogaard’s precise care, but they took note of the persistently high dosages of medications Boogaard was prescribed, and the seeming lack of a primary doctor overseeing his care. Baxter, from the American Society of Addiction Medicine, cited a three-step process for addicts: detoxification, rehabilitation and continuing care. “Continuing care is probably the most important part,” Baxter said. “It looks like he didn’t have much of that.” Boogaard’s case provides a window into a world usually shuttered to outsiders. Like most major professional sports teams, the Wild and the Rangers have many doctors — eight for the Wild, seven for the Rangers — from orthopedic surgeons to dentists. Team doctors often want to help athletes return to competition, so “the tendency is to overtreat,” said Dr. Jane Ballantyne, a professor of anesthesiology and pain medicine at the University of Washington. She also noted that because famous athletes have access to virtually any doctor they want, they often receive whatever treatment they want.

Multiple prescriptions There were few signs of trouble during Boogaard’s first few seasons with the Wild, beginning in 2005, when he quickly established himself as a leading enforcer. Documents show a marked shift after Oct. 16, 2008, when Boogaard lost a tooth during a fight with Florida’s Wade Belak. While it is unknown what drugs Boogaard received in South Florida that night, he was given a prescription for hydrocodone — often known by the brand name Vicodin — several days later by a Wild team dentist. That was the start of a 33day stretch when Boogaard received at least 195 hydrocodone pills from six doctors, records show. He received pharmacy prescriptions for most, but records indicate that some were dispensed directly from doctors, including the Wild medical director Sheldon Burns, a family practitioner

who is also medical director for the NBA’s Minnesota Timberwolves and a team physician for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League. Burns and Dr. Dan Peterson, who share a practice in Edina, Minn., prescribed 110 more hydrocodone pills from Dec. 4 to Jan. 1, records show. In April, with his season over, Boogaard had operations a week apart on his nose and shoulder. The painkiller prescriptions stopped during the 2009 summer offseason. By then, Boogaard had found illicit sources for pain pills from street dealers, according to his family and friends. Peterson and Burns continued to prescribe Ambien — five times, 30 pills each, over about three months of the offseason. Ambien, with a recommended dosage of one 10milligram pill a day, is considered a short-term solution to sleeping problems. The drug’s warning label notes that it can impair coordination and exacerbate depression. By fall, it was clear to those close to him that Boogaard had a drug problem, and the Wild caught on, too. During training camp in September, he was quietly placed in the league’s substance-abuse program, assigned to a live-in rehabilitation clinic in Malibu, Calif. Team doctors seem mostly to have stopped prescribing narcotic painkillers and sleeping pills during the 200910 season, after Boogaard’s rehabilitation assignment. Most of Boogaard’s prescriptions were for Trazodone, an antidepressant, and Tramadol, a different type of painkiller. Another prescription, in March, was for acetaminophen and codeine. Highlighting the difficulty of treating a player subjected to continual pain without the use of powerful pain pills, Boogaard also received at least eight injections of Ketrolac Tromethamine, commonly known as Toradol. He often received acupuncture as a painkiller substitute, too.

Inside information The Rangers knew about Boogaard’s addiction problems. Doug Risebrough, a senior official with the Rangers, had spent about a decade as the general manager of the Wild. He drafted Boogaard in 2001 and instructed coaches to turn him into a big-league enforcer. When Boogaard was sent to rehabilitation in September 2009, he called Risebrough, who had been fired by the Wild months earlier. In June 2010, now working for the Rangers’ front office, Risebrough met with Boogaard for a couple of hours, Len Boogaard said. In October, Derek’s brother Aaron told their father that Derek had been abusing pain pills with increasing regularity late in the summer. Derek demanded that Aaron mail to New York a large stash that Derek had left behind in Minneapolis. Aaron refused. Len Boogaard sent an email to the Rangers on Oct. 13, 2010, requesting a conversation with Risebrough. Risebrough called the next day. Len Boogaard said he told Risebrough about Derek’s renewed drug problem. Two days later, Derek called his father and, according to Len Boogaard, complained that general manager Glen Sather had called him into his office, demanding the truth

and threatening to trade him. Derek, apparently unaware that it was his father who had notified the Rangers, did not explain why Sather was upset — and Len Boogaard did not press him. The Rangers were on top of it, he thought. Derek Boogaard continued to play and fight. He increasingly received prescriptions for drugs that the Rangers knew he had previously abused. On Oct. 21, 2010, a punch from Toronto’s Colton Orr broke a three-tooth bridge in Boogaard’s mouth. Three days later, Boogaard hurt his hand in a fight with Boston’s Shawn Thornton.

‘Emergency’ hydrocodone On Oct. 26, a Rangers dentist, Dr. Joseph Esposito, citing an “emergency,” prescribed 20 hydrocodone pills, the first of five prescriptions written over several weeks, totaling 64 pills. It appears that decision might have come in consultation with the league’s substance-abuse program. On the evening of that first hydrocodone prescription, Boogaard spoke briefly with Shaw and Cronin. Outside experts noted the difficulty of treating a painkiller addict for ongoing pain. Cutting off all pain medications, they said, can lead to severe relapses in some patients. On Nov. 16, two days after Boogaard had his nose broken by Edmonton’s Steve McIntyre, Boogaard received another hydrocodone prescription from Esposito. Boogaard also received a prescription from another Rangers team doctor, Andrew Feldman, for 40 pills of Tramadol — a mild narcotic. It is unclear if Esposito and Feldman knew of each other’s prescriptions. “The doctor who prescribed Tramadol was probably thinking it’s better than hydrocodone, but it’s still addictive,” said Ballantyne, the University of Washington pain expert. Over the succeeding months, Boogaard continued to be prescribed medication — particularly Ambien. By several accounts, Boogaard drifted through wild mood swings and erratic behavior. Bored and lonely, he was sending and receiving more than 10,000 text messages a month in early 2011. Among those he communicated with were Cronin and Shaw, hundreds of times. Boogaard was subjected to at least 19 drug tests during his season with the Rangers, most of which showed him

testing positive — initially for antihistamines and decongestants, then Xanax, an anti-anxiety medication. By spring, Boogaard was testing positive for hydrocodone and other narcotic painkillers. On Dec. 16, Ronald Weissman, a team doctor and cardiologist based in White Plains, prescribed 20 pills of Xanax. Records show he did it after consultation with Lewis, the substance-abuse program co-director. Weissman’s notes also say that Boogaard, on Dec. 14, complained of “chronic insomnia.” Weissman wrote that he previously spoke with Lewis about Boogaard’s past abuse of Ambien. He prescribed Restoril, another sleeping medication. On Dec. 24, having just landed in Minneapolis for Christmas, Boogaard texted the Wild’s Peterson. Later that day he had a prescription for 30 Zolpidem, the generic version of Ambien — one of at least four such prescriptions that Peterson wrote for Boogaard after Boogaard joined the Rangers. On Jan. 6, 2011, Weissman prescribed Boogaard five pills of Ambien. While it is unknown what sort of guidance Weissman received from the substance-abuse directors, it was the first of nine Ambien prescriptions — the latter ones for 30 pills — that Weissman wrote for Boogaard over three months. Later in January, another doctor, a neurologist keeping tabs of Boogaard’s postconcussion symptoms, prescribed 30 pills of Zolpidem. Peterson, the Wild team doctor, prescribed 30 more on Feb. 2, when Boogaard was in Minnesota. By March, friends and family said, Boogaard was spending thousands of dollars on pain pills from a man on Long Island. In early April, Boogaard flopped on the ice during a skating session and was confronted by an assistant. Within days, Boogaard was in California for another extended stay in substanceabuse rehabilitation, his second in about 18 months. On May 12, granted a second long leave of absence from the rehabilitation facility, Boogaard returned to Minnesota. He went out with friends and his brother Aaron. A day later, Aaron and Ryan Boogaard — Derek’s other younger brother — found Boogaard dead of an overdose on the bed of his Minneapolis apartment. Len Boogaard has considered lawsuits. But he said that taking the NHL and those with ties to it to court could take a financial and time commitment that he could not afford. He cited the example of Steve Moore, a Colorado Avalanche player attacked on the ice by Vancouver’s Todd Bertuzzi in 2004. A long-awaited trial is scheduled to begin later this year. “It’s not the money,” Len Boogaard said. “But in eight years, how many more players are going to go through something like what Derek did?”

Book’s letters stirs the Vatican By Manya A. Brachear Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — Reams of private Vatican correspondence published in a new Italian best-seller reportedly include a plea by Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George, urging the Vatican to halt an award to Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn for abolishing the death penalty. George appears to play a minor role in the real-life Vatican whodunit that the Italian press has dubbed “Vatileaks.” Last week, the pope’s butler was arrested on suspicions that he leaked private letters, including some addressed to Pope Benedict XVI. Those letters reportedly appear in “Your Holiness: The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI,” a new book in which Italian writer Gianluigi Nuzzi airs a boatload of Vatican dirty laundry and hints of a reallife conspiracy akin to a Dan Brown novel. According to Vatican expert John Allen, the book includes what Nuzzi claims is an encrypted 2011 cable from the Apostolic Nuncio in Washington relaying a plea from George to Benedict’s Secretary of State. George asks that the Vatican official step in and block the Rome-based Community of Sant’Egidio from giving an award to Roman Catholic governor Quinn, Allen said. The memo, apparently sent in March of last year from the Apostolic Nuncio, said that the cardinal and bishops felt the honor was “inopportune” because of Quinn’s support for gay marriage and legalized abortion. The memo also noted the state’s refusal to renew foster care contracts with Catholic Charities in Illinois because the agencies would not license same-sex couples as prospective foster parents. Colleen Dolan, a spokeswoman for the cardinal, said George knew about his cameo in the book. She would not confirm or deny whether the memo was fact or fiction. “A private conversation between the cardinal and the nuncio — that’s equal to a conversation with the pope in form,” Dolan said. “I couldn’t comment on that.” But the scenario is not outside the realm of possibility, she said. “There’s a policy where the U.S. church does not encourage awards to be given to people whose policies are opposite of church teaching like abortion,” Dolan said. “Remember the Obama thing at Notre Dame? It’s the same thing.”

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

FAITH AND LITERATURE

Comics make moves to attract gay readers Nun’s book denounced by church By Laurie Goodstein and Rachel Donadio

By Michael Cavna

New York Times News Service

The Washington Post

The Vatican’s doctrinal office has denounced an American nun who taught Christian ethics at Yale Divinity School for a book that attempted to present a theological rationale for same-sex relationships, masturbation and remarriage after divorce. The Vatican office, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, said that the book, “Just Love: A Framework for Christian Sexual Ethics,” by Sister Margaret Farley, was “not consistent with authentic Catholic theology,” and should not be used by Roman Catholics. Farley, a past president of the Catholic Theological Society of America and an award-winning scholar, re-

Jon Goldwater was riding his New York commuter train, just two weeks into his new job as co-chief executive of Archie Comics, when a fellow passenger tossed off a remark that blindsided him. The fresh executive had an Archie folder on his lap, Goldwater recounts, “when a woman sitting near me turned and said: ‘They still make those?!’ “ “It. Freaked. Me. Out,” Goldwater continues. “I almost got sick to my stomach.” Yet he also took home the underlying message from the encounter several years ago: “If we didn’t change Riverdale, we would risk becoming irrelevant.” Led by Goldwater, the creative minds at Archie Comics decided to “update” their characters, which hark back to a mid-century era of malt shops and letter sweaters — when the jalopy chassis and presumed chastity went hand-inhand. In 2010, Archie Comics entered the current century by introducing Kevin Keller, Riverdale’s “first openly gay character.” The result: headlines and turned heads that culminated in its “Marriage of Kevin Keller!” issue selling out this year. To comics fans, none of this is new and surprising after decades of gay characters and relationships from mainstream publishers. But in the wake of President Barack Obama’s newly stated support of gay marriage, current examples of gay romance in comics have stepped into a klieg light of broader cultural resonance.

Gay superheroes Last week, Marvel Comics announced the proposal and same-sex nuptials of Northstar, its first gay superhero, in “Astonishing X-Men” No. 50 and No. 51 — it’s a June wedding. And just days before, DC publisher Dan DiDio said at London’s Kapow comic convention that a major DC character would soon become “one of our most prominent gay characters.” On Thursday, Green Lantern came out of the closet. “It was only natural that when New York legalized gay marriage last year,” says Marvel’s Tom Brevoort, editor of the “Astonishing X-Men” project, “our thoughts would turn to what impact this might have on Northstar and his ongoing relationship with his partner, Kyle. The story grew organically from there — and the zeitgeist at the moment gives it even greater relevance.” Is 2012, then, a flashpoint for depicting gay relationships in mainstream comics, or is this just an editorial blip made brighter by the glare of electoral politics? Tom Batiuk, an Akron native, Kent State graduate and Medina resident, is an Ohio man through and through. So it struck particularly close to home last year when he read about a parents’ group in the southern part of his state protesting a high school’s “tolerant attitude” toward gays. “I still go out to my old high school,” says Batiuk, who was a classroom teacher before launching his syndicated comic strip “Funky Winkerbean” 40 years ago. Batiuk knew then that somehow this picketing would make its way into his schoolset strip, which has dealt with such non-traditional “funny page” issues as teen suicide and pregnancy, alcoholism and capital punishment. In 2008, Batiuk was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for “Lisa’s Story,” the arc in which one of “Funky’s” main characters battled breast cancer. On the comics pages this month, Batiuk’s response to the parents’ protest has played out among “Funky’s” characters at Westview High. Two male students sought to attend the prom together, sparking what the cartoonist characterizes as a generational showdown. King Features says the story arc is now concluding. “I’m not trying to proselytize here,” Batiuk says. “I had a viewpoint and I knew which side I came down on. It’s less an issue of [being gay] and more an issue of tolerance and

Courtesy of Jon Goldwater

Led by Jon Goldwater, co-chief executive of Archie Comics, the comic book series In 2010 introduced Kevin Keller — Riverdale’s first openly gay character. Archie Comics’ “Marriage of Kevin Keller!” issue sold out this year.

intolerance. And that idea has been in ‘Funky’ from the very beginning.” Goldwater does acknowledge that he’s mindful of the political climate. “We work in a bubble [here] while feeding off the climate,” he says. “Readers deserve that we reflect some of what’s going on in society, and part of that is the political process. At Archie, we have a very strong point of view.” Goldwater, like Batiuk, believes being relevant to the next generation is a creative imperative. “We have to speak for the youth and to where the cultural shift in this country is going,” he tells us. “They’re the ones who are going to pick up the flag and wave it.” Unlike “Funky Winkerbean,” Paige Braddock’s online comic “Jane’s World” relies on gay as well as straight characters as a consistent source of humor, which means the strip faces a specific set of challenges when trying to break into the mainstream. “Over the years, I’ve definitely had some interesting conversations with newspaper editors and syndicate editors,” Braddock says of her strip, which debuted in 1998. “I had one editor tell me that ‘Jane’s World’ wasn’t gender-specific enough to be in papers. When I asked for clarification, he said that the comic didn’t deal with traditional female issues, like dieting, children, etc.”

No complaints online Because “Jane’s World” is primarily an online comic, Braddock says she doesn’t hear from many detractors over subject matter. “I only hear from readers who are actually looking for gay-related content, or at the very least aren’t turned off by the gay content in ‘Jane’s World,’ which most of the time is pretty PG-rated. ... And I’ve had quite a few straight readers email to thank me for giving them a glimpse into what it is to live as a gay person.” Among mainstream syndicated comics, Garry Trudeau’s “Doonesbury” has featured gay characters, and Lynn Johnston was a Pulitzer finalist for a “For Better or For Worse” story line that addressed a youth’s homosexuality. But Braddock doesn’t think those occasional stories change the game and market for her. And she also doesn’t think prominent gay-themed graphic novels by such cartoonists as Howard Cruse and Alison Bechdel alter the playing field for mainstream newspaper comics, either. “I’m proud of Lynn and Garry for doing these kinds of stories,” Braddock says. “I think when you are a well-established cartoonist, then the ‘powers that be’ will tolerate a potentially politically charged topic in your work once in a while. But as a general rule, a new strip couldn’t pull that off.” All of these challenges leave “Jane” — as a gaythemed comic — at a creative crossroads. “I’m considering what the next direction is for distribution,” Braddock says. “And I’m not sure I’ve settled on the answer yet, but I’m pretty sure doing a comic daily online will never be a way to create a viable income stream for cartoonists. . . . “I’ll let you know when I figure it out.”

sponded in a statement: “I can only clarify that the book was not intended to be an expression of current official Catholic teaching, nor was it aimed specifically against this teaching. It is of a different genre altogether.” The book, she said, Farley offers “contemporary interpretations” of justice and fairness in human sexual relations, moving away from a “taboo morality” and drawing on “presentday scientific, philosophical, theological, and biblical resources.” The censure of Farley, who belongs to the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, is the second time recently that a book by an American nun has been denounced by the church’s hierarchy. In 2011, the doctrine committee of U.S. bishops

condemned “Quest for the Living God: Mapping Frontiers in the Theology of God,” by Sister Elizabeth Johnson, a professor of theology at Fordham University in New York. The Vatican’s doctrinal office, led by an American, Cardinal William Levada, has spent more than two years reviewing Farley’s book, which was published in 2006. The office first notified Farley’s superior of its concerns in March 2010, and said it had opened a further investigation because a response she had sent to the Vatican in October 2010 hadn’t been “satisfactory.” It said her book had “been a cause of confusion among the faithful.” The dean of Yale Divinity School, Harold Attridge, a

Catholic layman, and the president of the Sisters of Mercy, Sister Patricia McDermott, issued statements in support of Farley. So did 15 fellow scholars who, in a document released by the divinity school, testified to Farley’s Catholic credentials and the influence she has had in the field of moral theology. Levada’s statement about the book, dated March 30 but released on Monday, said, “Among the many errors and ambiguities of this book are its positions on masturbation, homosexual acts, homosexual unions, the indissolubility of marriage and the problem of divorce and remarriage.” The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the Vatican had not called for any sanctions against Farley and was not expected to do so because she has retired from teaching.


BUSINESS

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www.bendbulletin.com/business

CRUX FERMENTATION PROJECT Editor’s note: With 12 breweries, beer making has become an industry in Bend and Central Oregon. The Bulletin is following the progress of the Crux Fermentation Project, the brewery being built by industry veterans Larry Sidor, Dave Wilson and Paul Evers in a former transmission repair shop in the center of Bend.

Job recovery could take many years • Oregon may see pre-recession employment numbers by late 2014; Deschutes County could take longer By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

Photos by Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

Larry Sidor at the soon-to-be opened Crux Fermentation Project brewery in Bend, of which he is a partner.

Recipes brew • Brewmaster Sidor plans

unusual selections for the taps at the new brewery in Bend

While the Great Recession may have officially ended two years ago, it may take until the end of 2014 for employment statewide to return to pre-recession levels, according to the Oregon Employment Department. In Deschutes County, it may take even longer. The state lost about 148,000 jobs between the employment peak in February 2008 and November 2009, when statewide employment bottomed out, according to an Employment Department report released May 22. Deschutes County lost 11,620 jobs between its June 2007 employment peak and its low in June 2011, said Carolyn Eagan, the Employment Department’s regional economist for Central Oregon. By the end of last year, the state had recovered about 37,000 jobs, according to the report. In order for Oregon to recover the additional 110,500 jobs lost in the recession by 2014, the state would need to add more than 3,000 new jobs each month, on average — double the rate seen in 2010 and 2011. See Jobs / G3

Deschutes employment levels The Oregon Employment Department predicts it will take until the end of 2014 for the state as a whole to recover jobs lost in the recession. But in Deschutes County, which lost an even greater percentage of jobs, it could take even longer. Deschutes County employment levels for three sectors: 2001-2011 10K 9,020 8,950

Government By Jordan Novet

8,330

The Bulletin

L

arry Sidor, the former brewmaster for Bend’s Deschutes Brewery, hasn’t brewed beer in more than two years. But, with less than a month left before the opening of the brewery, he and two colleagues dreamed up, he has no fear. Sidor has not forgotten how to make a hoppy India pale ale or a hefeweizen, both of which will be available at the partners’ Crux Fermentation Project, located at 50 S.W. Division St., in Bend. With nearly 40 years of industry experience, he will also serve up complex brews not usually found at a startup brewery in the West. Märzen and saison, for example, are more commonplace in central Europe than Central Oregon. “I can’t wait to start brewing,” he said. “I’m excited.” Crux is one of at least four Central Oregon breweries that plan to start turning out beer in the next three months or so. The partners have been busy, hiring employees, installing equipment and planning the business. Nevertheless, on a late May day when refrigeration experts, a boiler inspector, a bevy of contractors and two family members wanted his attention, Sidor walked outside and spent three hours talk-

Mining, logging and construction

8K 7,430 6K

5,320 4,620

4,520

4,150

4K 3,410

Financial activities

3,400

3,210

2K ’01 ’02 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 Source: Oregon Department of Employment Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Glen Costa, an employee of Metalart Welding of Bend, works on a tank at the soon-to-be opened Crux Fermentation Project brewery in Bend.

ing about making beer. He has come a long way since he started in the industry at Olympia Brewing Co. in Tumwater, Wash., in the 1970s. Back then, he took no risks. At first, as a research-and-development

brewer for Olympia, which sold 4 million barrels per year, Sidor made tiny tweaks to the brewery’s three recipes: the company’s standard American lager, a dark version and a lower-alcohol version. See Crux / G5

Inventors race to breathe extra life into batteries By Eric Niiler Special to The Washington Post

New Age war waged for retreat’s soul By Julia Prodis Sulek San Jose Mercury News

BIG SUR, Calif. — The worldfamous Esalen Institute hasn’t seen this much controversy since a psychic was hired in 1979 to contact extraterrestrials for advice on reorganizing management. Now, as Esalen marks its 50th anniversary, veterans of the New Age retreat center best known for massages, self-awareness and naked hot-tubbing say a new crisis has emerged: a corporate philosophy bent on making money and turning the institute into a boutique-style spa. “Esalen now emulates the worst of corporate America,” one employee posted on esaleaks.org, a website modeled on WikiLeaks that gives voice to the Esalen community of workers and workshop leaders that is suddenly feeling more fear and intimidation than peace and love. “We’ve lost sight of what this place was founded for,” said Bill Herr, who has been connected

Patrick Tehan / San Jose Mercury News

An outdoor workshop on permaculture takes place at Esalen Institute in Big Sur, Calif. Veterans of the New Age retreat say it’s lost sight of it’s philosophy but instead is focused on the bottom line.

with Esalen for two decades and is now the director of its art center. The controversy comes at a time when the institute is striving to maintain its identity, relevance and bottom line — long after its

pioneering achievements have gone mainstream: yoga classes at the YMCA, massages at the mall, organic food at Walmart. Tensions reached a boiling point in April when three beloved midlevel managers were abruptly

laid off as part of a “restructuring.” The widow of one of the two co-founders as well as an Esalen board member resigned in protest. A son of one founder and a nephew of another worry about Esalen’s legacy. And every day at 1 p.m., a defiant group — sometimes as many as 70 people — gather in a silent “circle of honor” to mourn the loss of the laid-off co-workers. “It’s been a bloodbath in ways as the old school has met the new,” said David Schiffman, 69, who has led “vision quests” and workshops at Esalen for 43 years. He recently decided to stop singing and drumming at the “spirit calling and purification” ceremonies on a deck overlooking the Pacific Ocean. “I didn’t want to be fiddling while Rome burned,” Schiffman said. “I couldn’t imagine playing music in a place where people were having the music squeezed out of them.” See Esalen / G3

When Noam Kedem was strolling around the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January, he was struck by the fact that business seemed to slow down every afternoon. And it wasn’t because of the usual post-lunch blahs. With attendees using bigger and more powerful smartphones, “you couldn’t talk to anyone after 3 p.m. because their smartphone batteries had all died,” said Kedem, vice president of marketing at Leyden Energy, a battery technology firm based in Fremont, Calif. “Everyone was running from charger to charger.” From iPhones and laptops to electric vehicles, much of our plugged-in lifestyle seems tied to finding a suitable wall outlet. Yet consumer frustration has only grown as each new device drains batteries ever more quickly. See Batteries / G5

Illustration by Brad Walters The Washington Post


G2

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

M

If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323, email business@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.

N R DEEDS Deschutes County

Albert M. and Dianna L. Reinemer to Ronald J. and Seanna McMann Jollo trustees for McMann-Jollo Revocable Trust, Townsite of Redmond, Lots 21 and 22, Block 26, $187,000 Eric Zelenka to Jacob and Sarah Gump, Lava Ridges, Phase 3, Lot 66, $350,000

Fannie Mae aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Jeffery A. Nothiger, Mountain High, Lots 3 and 4, Block 12, $307,000 Julie A. Taft to Benjamin J. and Erin E. Mullis, Golden Mantle, Third Addition, Lot 11, Block 4, $150,000 Fannie Mae aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Ronald L. Angle, Cascade View Estates, Phase 1, Lot 221, $152,000 Kevin and Kylie Olson who acquired

title as Kylie Roth to Patricia J. Wolf, Forest Hills, Phase 1, Lot 29, $305,000 Forrest K. and Kathryn E. Jones to Adrian M. and Heidi L. Krueger, Foxborough, Phase 3, Lot 170, $160,000 Hans Van den Houten to Kathryn T. Holleran and Mark E. Connell, Cascade Village P.U.D., Lot 35, $290,000 John E. and Aida Gale to Robert F. and Virginia A. Brooks, River Glen, Lot 1, $272,000

Elfriede L. Karras trustee for Elfriede L. Karras Trust to Richard J. and Glenda S. Matusewicz, Partition Plat 1993-34, Parcel 1, $445,000 Gregory E. and Linda S. Taylor to Estelle Johnson, Conestoga Hills, Lot 10, Block 1, $305,000 Steven A. and Julie E. Bradley to Clara A. and Michael S. Chun, Westbrook Meadows P.U.D., Phase 3, Lot 6, $235,000

Robert E. and Linda A. Weston to Jay D. and Lynela R. Green, Fairview Acres, Lots 1 and 2, Block 1, $290,000 David C. and Laurie G. Neil to Darren T. Hansen, West Hills, Lot 11, Block 7, $510,000 Crook County

Daren Curry to James D. and Jeanine M. Hilburn, Crystal Springs Subdivision, Phase 1, Lot 17, $260,000

Northwest Trustee Services Inc. to Federal National Mortgage Association, Township 16, Range 17, Section 20, $343,540.98 Billie W. Gale to Ronald L. and Heidi A. Carpinella, Township 13, Range 16, Section 7, $170,000 Marv Harris Enterprises Inc. to Verne A. and Desiree M. Foreman, Lost Lake Estates Subdivision, Phase 3, Lot 29, $253,500

At Amazon’s warehouses, cooler times By Spencer Soper The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.)

ALLENTOWN, Pa. — This time last year, online retailer Amazon.com Inc. had ambulances parked outside its Breinigsville, Pa., warehouse complex on hot days, with emergency medical personnel ready to take workers suffering from heat injuries to nearby hospitals. Today, Amazon warehouse workers say the facility is refreshingly cool when it’s hot and muggy outside. The company recently installed 40 roof-top air conditioners in its 615,000-square-foot warehouse, part of a $52 million investment in cooling its warehouses across the country. “I didn’t even break a sweat today,� one worker said at the end of his shift last week, on a day when area temperatures topped 90 degrees. “It was really nice. I noticed the difference as soon as I walked in the door.�

April Bartholomew / Allentown Morning Call file photo

Karen Salasky poses in front of the Amazon building in Fogelsville, Penn., in 2011. Salasky lost her job at the Amazon warehouse in Breinigsville because her production dropped due to the hot working conditions. She was happy to learn about the newly installed air conditioning system. “It’s a step in the right direction. Workers need to be respected,� Salasky said.

Feeling the heat The dramatic change comes nine months after an investigation by The Morning Call revealed difficult working conditions in the facility. Workers interviewed said they were pushed to work at dizzying rates in brutal heat. The heat index, a real-feel measure that considers heat and humidity, surpassed 100 degrees in the warehouse multiple times last year and sometimes exceeded 110, according to reports filed with the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Work in the warehouse is physical, with many employees walking more than 10 miles per shift plucking items from shelves. Workers said those who didn’t move at a sufficient pace faced termination. They said quotas were not reduced when temperatures soared. A customer backlash and heightened media scrutiny of the Seattle company’s operations followed publication of The Morning Call article. The volume of complaints was sufficient for the company to give its customer service representatives statements to send in response to concerns about working conditions. Amazon, which opened its Breinigsville complex in 2010, blamed the warehouse heat on a particularly hot spring and summer. The company installed temporary air conditioning units last year after federal workplace safety regulators began inspecting the facility. But workers said parts of the warehouse, particularly its upper levels, remained unbearably hot even after the temporary air conditioning was installed. Amazon gave water, fruit and ice pops to workers on hot days and relaxed its attendance rules on some days to let workers leave early, though they would lose pay. In the past 11 weeks, Amazon has declined to answer specific questions from The Morning Call about its decision to install air conditioning at its warehouses. But the company said in a statement last Thursday, “In recent years, we’ve built our new fulfillment centers with air conditioning units installed. This year, we are also investing $52 million to retrofit our other fulfillment centers with air conditioning. In Breinigsville, we have replaced the three large temporary units we installed last summer with forty permanent roof-mounted units that will more efficiently and evenly

cool the facility.â€? The Morning Call obtained warehouse building permits using Pennsylvania’s Rightto-Know Law. Those reveal that Amazon first sought permits to install temporary air conditioning last July, several weeks after warehouse workers and an emergency room doctor who treated some of them for heat stress complained to federal regulators about conditions. That temporary system was removed from the warehouse in November, records show, and a contractor sought permits to install permanent air conditioning in early March. The March permit application came 2½ months before Amazon Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos announced at an annual shareholders meeting May 24 that the company is installing air conditioning at warehouses around the country. “It’s not easy to retrofit an existing fulfillment center with air conditioning,â€? The Seattle Times quoted Bezos as telling shareholders. “We’re really leading the way here.â€? Bezos’ announcement followed public protests against the company and working conditions at its warehouses. Bethlehem, Pa., resident Karen Salasky, who said she lost her job at Amazon’s Breinigsville warehouse last summer after her work slowed in the heat, traveled to Seattle in May to participate in one of the protests near Amazon’s new headquarters. She said she was pleased to learn air conditioning is being installed at Amazon warehouses. “It’s a step in the right direction,â€? Salasky said last week. “Workers need to be respected.â€?

Controlling their image Business experts can only speculate why Amazon — a fast-growing enterprise that is changing the nature of retail shopping and is known for its competitive business tactics — decided to invest so much on air conditioning. The amount is equivalent to 8.2 percent of Amazon’s 2011 earnings. Donna Hoffman, co-director of the Sloan Center for Internet Retailing at the University of California-Riverside, said media exposure about working conditions likely prompted the investment. The company faces intense competition for online sales and doesn’t want a negative image, she said. Also, Amazon will continue

to lose part of its competitive edge on prices as it is forced to collect online sales taxes in more states, she said. “It behooves them to not be responsible for negative publicity if they can control it,� Hoffman said. “Paying $52 million to install air conditioning around the country is a smart move. They don’t need consumers asking themselves, ‘Is Amazon a sweatshop?’ “ But an analyst who follows the company for a business and technology research firm in Cambridge, Mass., said it probably wasn’t negative media coverage but a desire to protect products and maximize profits that prompted Amazon’s decision. “Amazon ships a lot of electronics and food now. It’s not good to have that stuff in extreme temperatures,� said Sucharita Mulpuru, an analyst with Forrester Research. “I would like to think there was an element of humanity to the decision but there’s nothing in Amazon’s history or in Jeff Bezos’ public persona that would lead me to think that was the driver of the decision. . Rarely has Amazon made any business decisions that didn’t affect the bottom line.� Amazon has quickly become one of the top 25 employers in Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley, with 1,381 local workers as of September. Hundreds more are employed at the Breinigsville warehouse through the temporary staffing firm Integrity Staffing Solutions. Amazon has declined to tell The Morning Call how many temporary workers are employed in the warehouse, where staffing increases during the holiday shopping season. Signs of problems at the warehouse surfaced in May 2011, when Cetronia Ambulance Corps made several trips to the facility to treat workers suffering from the heat. Amazon subsequently paid to have ambulances stationed in its parking lot on hot days in case workers suffered heat stress. In June of that year, OSHA started receiving complaints about working conditions in the warehouse. One employee complained that 15 workers collapsed on the job when the warehouse heat index exceeded 100 degrees, according to OSHA records. An emergency room doctor who treated warehouse workers suffering from the heat called federal regulators to report an “unsafe environment,� OSHA records state. OSHA opened an

inspection of the warehouse that month. In July, a contractor working for Amazon applied for permits to install temporary air conditioning units at the facility. Cooling equipment supplier Johnson Controls proposed installing three “440-ton portable air-cooled screw chillers.� The units are designed for “quick delivery and minimal installation time when you need temporary cooling,� according to records submitted to the building department in Upper Macungie Township, Pa. Johnson Controls told the township the goal of installing the cooling system was to reduce the temperature in the warehouse to approximately 85 degrees. The temporary air conditioning system was turned on that summer. In August, OSHA completed its inspection. The agency issued no fines and made recommendations to reduce heat-related risks to employees, including reducing heat and humidity in the warehouse. The agency says those working in temperatures above 100 degrees are at risk of heat stress but it did not specify an acceptable temperature for the facility.

The Morning Call published its investigation of working conditions, which included interviews with 20 warehouse workers, in September. Other media outlets picked up the story, and the news quickly spread around the world. Thousands of comments were posted in online debates after the story was highlighted by The New York Times, Washington Post, Yahoo, Huffington Post and others. Amazon responded to media scrutiny by saying it “spent more than $2.4 million urgently installing industrial air conditioning units in four of our fulfillment centers, including our Breinigsville facility. These industrial air conditioning units were online and operational by late July and early August. This was not mandated by any governmental agency, and in fact air conditioning remains an unusual practice in warehouses. We’ll continue to operate these air conditioning units or equivalent ones in future summers.� Consumer backlash over working conditions at the warehouse proved limited and didn’t slow Amazon’s breakneck growth. The company had 2011 sales of $48 billion, up 40 percent from the previous year. Still, Amazon continued to address heat at its warehouses. In March, a contractor applied for permits to install 40 roof-top air conditioners at Amazon’s Breinigsville shipping hub. The new system installed appears superior to last year’s temporary system, according to an industrial engineer who reviewed records for The Morning Call. Air circulation is a key component of keeping a large space such as a warehouse cool. Without adequate circulation, hot air can stagnate in spots, especially at higher levels because hot air rises. Since the new air conditioning system releases air at more

points and all of them at the roof, it should do a better job of cooling the warehouse, the engineer said. Contractors installed the air conditioners in April, using a helicopter to hoist each unit to the roof. That same month, The Seattle Times launched a series about the company. One of the stories examined working conditions at the company’s warehouses in Kentucky, where workers also complained about having to work at fast paces in heat that pushed them to their physical limits. On May 10, Upper Macungie Township’s building department finished inspecting the air conditioning installation at the Breinigsville warehouse, allowing the air conditioners to be used.

The cool down Six warehouse workers, including pickers who do a lot of walking, said the air conditioners are making their work environment more comfortable and that it’s easier to do their jobs in cooler conditions. The workers requested anonymity because they are not authorized to speak with the media. “It’s cool in there,� one worker said. “The third floor used to be the hottest. Now it’s the nicest.� One worker said he started at the warehouse in November and was worried about warehouse heat heading into the summer. “Even in November, on the third floor, it was really hot,� he said. “You were really sweating. The air conditioners are definitely needed, and they’re appreciated.� One worker who was there last summer said, “There seems to be an improvement.�

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Esalen

Jobs

Continued from G1 Founded by Michael Murphy and Dick Price in 1962, Esalen quickly became a symbol of California’s hippie counterculture, attracting the music and pop psychology icons of the day — from Bob Dylan and Joan Baez to Timothy Leary, Fritz Perls and Abraham Maslow, whose “hierarchy of needs” became required college reading. In the 1970s, Murphy’s “Golf in the Kingdom” became a best-seller. And in the ’80s, Esalen became known for “hot tub diplomacy” when it tried to play a role in easing Cold War tensions by hosting Soviet diplomats on tours of America, including then-Moscow Mayor Boris Yeltsin, and meetings with their U.S. counterparts. “In its day, Esalen was the TED Talks and Burning Man all rolled into one,” said David Price, general manager from 1995 to 2003 and son of cofounder Dick Price, who died when he was crushed by a Big Sur boulder in 1985. “I just don’t see it as having that level of impact right now. To me, it’s a shame.” And while the current strife “looks like a management vs. labor kind of dispute,” said the art center’s Herr, “what’s really going on is a kind of cultural assault.” But Esalen President Gordon Wheeler and board member Bill James say Esalen remains a vibrant place where for the past eight years — many of those recessionary years — it has welcomed record numbers of guests to sex and marriage sessions, organic farming seminars, human potential workshops and leadership conferences. Still, Wheeler said, “it is true we have to have more emphasis on accountability and job effectiveness than we used to. We’re a nonprofit. We do need to break even. The pressures for that are greater than they used to be, for sure.”

Continued from G1 Statewide, and in Deschutes County, the three sectors with the largestpercentage drop in employment were construction, manufacturing and financial activities, said Nick Beleiciks, co-author of the report. Oregon lost 37 percent of its construction jobs, 23 percent of manufacturing jobs and 16 percent of jobs in financial activities. Deschutes County, Eagan said, lost 60 percent of its construction jobs, 43 percent of manufacturing jobs and 22 percent financial activities jobs — from each industry’s pre-recession employment peak. While Beleiciks said manufacturing has regained some jobs, construction, financial activities and government haven’t seen much improvement and will have the slowest recovery. Eagan noted Deschutes County also has started to regain jobs in the manufacturing sector, but not at the same pace as the state. Construction employment may not return to prerecession levels within the next eight years, Beleiciks said. The housing bubble helped fuel the number of pre-recession construction jobs to levels that could not be sustained long term, he said. Beleiciks said financial activities — which includes jobs in real estate and banking — experienced a one-two punch with the housing downturn and banking crisis, which is now holding back employment in the sector. “Banks haven’t expanded within the last three years because of the crisis,” Beleiciks said. “Banks reached their peak employment in 2006 and then cut jobs during the financial crisis. They reached a low point in 2009 and essentially have stayed there.” But while the private sector overall has been adding jobs, he said, local government has been cutting, especially in education. Overall, government employment rose early in the recession due to the American Recovery and Rein-

Photos by Patrick Tehan / San Jose Mercury News

Staff member Jonathan Polansky plays guitar during lunch at Esalen Institute. The New Age retreat marks its 50th anniversary this year.

David Schiffman stands near his Carmel Valley, Calif., home. The 69-year-old has worked at Esalen on and off for 43 years. “I couldn’t imagine playing music in a place where people were having the music squeezed out of them,” said Schiffman.

Not seeing eye to eye The controversy has been made all the more painful and intense, he said, by the isolation of the institute 45 miles down the rocky coastline from Monterey — and the fact that about 100 employees live on the property and feel as close as family. Many participate in the “work/study” program, living on the property, doing housekeeping or working in the garden and kitchen, as well as joining groups of stocking-feet workshop guests in meditation and other selfhelp seminars. The recent changes have been especially difficult for those who go back decades. Like most companies, James said, Esalen employees now must log their hours and explain overtime — which to old-timers “smacks of not being trusted.” And after a recent incident in which a busy, exasperated kitchen employee refused to make a birthday

“We’ve lost sight of what this place was founded for,” said Bill Herr of Esalen Institute.

cake for a guest, James said, employees were encouraged to “smile and nod” at guests as they pass them along the dirt pathways. “You would have thought we ordered them to wear a uniform,” James said. “Something like this is a revolution to them.” The nonprofit corporation that owns Esalen has healthy reserves and is embarking on an ambitious long-term plan to renovate nearly every yurt, cottage and barn on the property. But Esalen officials say they have no intention of turning the place into a luxury resort like Post Ranch and Ventana just up Highway 1.

“To become a high-end spa would be too dull for us,” Wheeler said. “We’d like to serve our guests a little better. But that’s it.” While Esalen may have a five-star view, recent upgrades to some guest units raised them closer to Holiday Inn status, James said. He and Wheeler say they want to keep the institute focused on the “cutting edge” of thought, on personal and social transformations and helping mold leaders through “conscious business” seminars. Earlier this month, executives from Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, Nordstrom and IDEO gathered for one of them. The irony isn’t lost on Esalen managers, who know they sometimes appear to have missed some of their own workshops — “Enlightened Leadership in Challenging Times,” for instance. “We’re trying to do the best we can, and we don’t always get it right,” Wheeler said. “Could we have handled it better? I think we could have, yes.” The institute has certainly gone through tough times before. In 1998, El Niño storms destroyed the legendary openair mineral baths fed by hot springs jetting out of the cliffs. Cost overruns to rebuild the

Study: Checking accounts are still too confusing, expensive By Jim Puzzanghera Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — Despite some recent improvements by the nation’s largest banks, checking accounts are still too confusing for consumers and overdraft fees are too high, according to new findings by the Pew Charitable Trusts. Disclosures for checking accounts are too long, some fees for overdraft protection have increased, and many consumers still are forced into binding arbitration to settle disputes with their bank, said the study released Friday by Pew’s Safe Checking in the Electronic Age Project. “Consumers are expected to wade through long, confusing documents and may be subject to steep, unexpected fees to access their own checking accounts, the cornerstone of household financial management,” said Susan Weinstock, the project’s director. “Consumers must have understandable, transparent information that enables them to make educated choices when comparing one checking account’s costs and benefits to another.” Pew used the findings to continue to push regulators to force banks to provide better

disclosure and make overdraft fees proportional to the banks’ costs. The study is an update to the project’s 2011 report, “Hidden Risks: The Case for Safe and Transparent Checking Accounts,” which raised alarms about fees and disclosures at the nation’s 10 largest banks. This time, Pew looked at the practices at the 12 largest banks, as well as the 12 largest credit unions in a followup report titled “Still Risky: An Update on the Safety and Transparency of Checking Accounts.” Improvements in key areas have been minimal, said the new report, which compared the original data, from 2010, with new data collected in October. The median length of bank checking account disclosures has decreased to 69 pages from 111 pages in the earlier report. But the disclosures still are too cumbersome and “important policies and fee information are not summarized in a uniform, concise, and easyto-understand format that allows customers to compare account terms and condition,” Pew said. Overdraft fees are an area of

particular concern. Pew found that financial institutions do not provide clear and detailed information about options for overdraft protection and their costs. Many banks and credit unions have three options with very different fees and features, but “consumers may not be aware of lower-cost options.” The median overdraft fees for large banks remains $35, the same as in the first report. But more checking accounts now come with an extended overdraft penalty fee, which kicks in if the overdraft is not repaid in a timely manner. The median extended overdraft fee has increased 32 percent since the first report. The report also said consumers still faced hurdles in settling disputes. Of the 237 different checking accounts offered by the largest banks, 66 percent forced customers to submit any disputes to binding arbitration, down from 71 percent in the first report. But the percentage of accounts that force customers to pay the bank’s losses, costs and expenses from the dispute, regardless of who wins, has increased to 32 percent from 12 percent.

bathhouse and tubs plunged the institute deeply into debt and forced managers to rethink operations. People with more business backgrounds and fewer psychology credentials were invited to join the board. And conflicts with staff became more common as more basic business practices were implemented. The Esaleaks website was created a year before the recent layoffs as an anonymous forum for employees to air their gripes. Posted documents, from staff salaries to tax returns, have been uploaded to the site. On the website, the writers sardonically refer to themselves as “The Nine,” a reference to the so-called nine extraterrestrials from the star Sirius that British psychic Jenny O’Connor said she “channeled” to help her decide how to shake-up management in the late 1970s. At the time, some in the community referred to “The Nine” as “extraterrestrial hatchet men.” O’Connor was hired by Dick Price. “I think he may have used her to enact things he wanted to do anyway,” said his son David, who lives in Poland but returns to Esalen every year. “There was a level of absurdity to the whole thing.” The current management crisis, however, seems to cut deeper. Several recent meetings and letters back and forth have so far failed to ease the tensions. “The realities that sober you up, that make you feel the weight of things, the responsibility to be serious, not dreamy or childish, have come home to roost,” Schiffman said. “The struggle has been to keep the soul of Esalen intact.”

G3

vestment Act and peaked in mid-2010. It continues to drop — having declined 4.4 percent from its peak as of Dec. 31 — and may fall even more, he said. “The government sector is currently at its lowest point of employment since the recession,” Beleiciks said Thursday. “It peaked in June 2010 and started to decline from there.” Local education accounted for 4,300 of the 6,000 government jobs lost statewide during the recovery, according to the report. “How quickly government returns to pre-recession levels depends on what the government budgets look like over the next couple of years,” he said. While the statewide job loss totaled 8.5 percent, Deschutes County saw 16.2 percent of its jobs vanish during the recession, according to the Employment Department. Eagan said Deschutes County saw a greater percentage of employment losses in multiple sectors compared to the state. “Even if the housing market and construction came back, I don’t think by 2014 we will have the same number of jobs that we did pre-recession,” she said. Between June 2011 — Deschutes County’s employment low point — and December 2011, the county added back 360 jobs, Eagan said. At the end of 2011, she said, the county needed 11,260 jobs to get back to the pre-recession job height of 71,760 jobs. “The employment in Deschutes County is unlikely to return to pre-recession levels by 2014, unless we have significant growth in the other industries,” she said. “Future job growth in Deschutes County is difficult to forecast.” — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

G4

Mutual funds m

%

%

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Name

AQR Funds:

Calamos Funds:

DivArb I n 11.03 -.02 +1.3 +12.1 MgdFutSt I n 9.86 -.23 -1.3 NS

ConvA p GlbGr&IncI Gr&IncC t Grth&IncA p Grwth&IncoI GrowthA p GrowthC t Growth I MktNeutI r MktNeutA p

Alger Funds A: SpectraN

12.97 +.51 +4.9 +63.2

Alger Funds I: CapApprI SmCapGrI

21.48 +.81 +4.5 +52.4 26.93 +1.12 -2.2 +54.7

AllianceBernstein : IntDurInstl

16.10 -.10 +5.2 +33.3

AllianceBern A: GloblBdA r 8.45 GroIncA p 3.64 HighIncoA p 8.82 LgCapGrA p 26.34

-.02 +.13 +.06 +.94

+4.4 +5.3 +3.0 +3.1

+32.8 +45.2 +60.3 +47.6

AllianceBern Adv: HiIncm Adv

8.83 +.06 +3.3 +61.8

AllianceBern C: HighIncoC p

8.91 +.05 +2.0 +56.3

Allianz Admin MMS: NFJSmCpVl t 27.72 +.83 -0.8 +51.7

Allianz Fds Instl: NFJDivVal SmCpVl n

11.61 +.41 +1.0 +42.6 29.16 +.88 -0.6 +52.9

Allianz Funds A: NFJDivVal t SmCpV A

11.52 +.41 +0.6 +41.1 27.75 +.83 -1.0 +51.0

Alpine Funds: TaxOptInco 10.05 ... +1.5 AmanaGrth n 25.57 +.85 NA AmanaInco n 31.99 +.85 NA

+5.2 NA NA

Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst SmCapInst

19.68 +.74 +2.6 +44.6 19.48 +.75 -1.7 +55.8

Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv

18.66 +.70 +2.2 +43.0

Ameri Century 1st: Growth

26.88 +.98 +5.8 +52.4

Amer Century Adv: EqtyIncA p HeritageA p

7.44 +.19 +3.5 +36.3 20.97 +.83 -0.1 +61.3

Amer Century Inst: EqInc

7.44 +.18 +3.8 +38.2

Amer Century Inv: AllCapGr CAIntTF DivBond n DivBond EqGroInv n EqInco GNMAI GovtBd GrowthI HeritageI IncGro InfAdjBond IntTF IntTF n IntlBnd IntlGroI MdCapVal NT DivrBd n SelectI Ultra n ValueInv Vista

29.32 11.83 11.14 11.14 22.63 7.44 11.26 11.59 26.64 21.62 25.62 13.30 11.59 11.59 14.36 9.63 12.20 11.05 41.53 24.63 5.84 16.77

+1.09 +3.9 -.07 +8.8 -.06 +7.0 -.06 +6.8 +.81 +6.5 +.19 +3.6 +.01 +5.1 -.07 +6.1 +.97 +5.7 +.85 +0.1 +.88 +5.5 -.10 +12.1 -.06 +7.7 -.06 +7.9 -.09 -0.6 +.35 -15.2 +.41 +2.2 -.05 +7.0 +1.53 +5.9 +.90 +5.1 +.19 +2.5 +.70 -0.9

+60.2 +22.0 +25.0 +24.3 +50.4 +37.4 +20.4 +19.4 +51.5 +62.6 +45.5 +33.8 +20.3 +21.1 +14.3 +24.7 +56.0 +24.7 +50.3 +53.0 +40.9 +43.6

American Funds A: AmcapFA p AmMutlA p BalA p BondFdA p CapInBldA p CapWGrA p CapWldA p EupacA p FundInvA p GlblBalA GovtA p GwthFdA p HI TrstA p HiIncMuniA IncoFdA p IntBdA p IntlGrIncA p InvCoAA px LtdTEBdA p NwEconA p NewPerA p NewWorldA STBFA p SmCpWA p TaxExA p TxExCAA p WshMutA p

19.93 26.84 19.00 12.76 49.99 32.89 20.85 35.55 36.85 24.87 14.53 30.82 10.77 14.85 17.02 13.70 26.88 28.33 16.26 26.07 27.52 47.28 10.08 35.82 12.88 17.30 29.26

+.57 +3.5 +.78 +5.8 +.45 +5.7 -.05 +5.9 +.96 +0.6 +1.01 -8.4 +.01 +1.2 +1.09 -15.3 +1.29 -0.8 +.46 -1.4 -.06 +6.3 +1.01 +0.7 +.05 +1.3 -.05 +14.1 +.39 +3.0 -.04 +2.7 +.77 -13.2 +.83 +2.7 -.06 +6.1 +.88 -0.2 +.83 -4.8 +1.23 -12.9 -.01 +0.7 +1.00 -8.1 -.07 +10.8 -.08 +12.9 +.98 +6.3

+46.6 +47.2 +42.1 +29.2 +34.4 +25.9 +24.0 +17.1 +39.3 NS +19.6 +34.7 +49.5 +35.6 +46.4 +15.5 +20.9 +36.9 +18.8 +41.5 +35.2 +26.9 +6.1 +46.4 +25.4 +30.9 +49.7

American Funds B: BalanB p CapInBldB p CapWGrB t GrowthB t IncomeB p

18.91 49.98 32.68 29.82 16.89

+.44 +.95 +.99 +.97 +.39

+4.9 -0.1 -9.1 -0.1 +2.3

+38.8 +31.3 +23.0 +31.7 +43.1 +9.7 +8.9

Ariel Investments: 40.52 +1.74 -6.4 +63.1 44.45 +1.73 -9.3 +61.8

Artio Global Funds: 9.86 9.42 22.60 22.06 9.57 13.70

+.04 +.04 +.50 +.50 +.28 ...

-1.1 -0.9 -23.7 -23.8 -22.0 +6.5

+41.9 +43.0 -0.9 -1.6 +1.1 +30.0

+.59 +.60 +.87 +.87 +1.59 +1.65 +.54 +.56

-6.4 -6.2 -9.8 -9.6 +4.2 +4.5 0.0 -5.4

+29.6 +30.4 +36.6 +37.3 +72.0 +73.3 +50.5 +42.0

Artisan Funds: Intl IntlInstl IntlValu r IntlValInstl MidCap MidCapInstl MidCapVal SmCapVal

20.91 21.04 25.46 25.51 36.62 37.97 19.91 15.02

Aston Funds: FairMidCpN M&CGroN

29.76 +1.12 -5.5 +60.8 24.29 +.76 +7.8 +37.7

BBH Funds: BdMktN CoreSelN

10.33 +.01 +1.1 +11.1 15.87 +.43 +6.3 +57.0

BNY Mellon Funds: BondFund EmgMkts IntmBdFd LrgCapStk MidCapStk NatlIntMuni NtlShTrmMu

13.53 8.92 13.16 8.54 11.12 13.85 12.99

-.04 +.24 -.03 +.31 +.38 -.07 -.01

+5.2 -20.6 +3.9 -2.0 -8.5 +7.8 +1.6

+21.1 +20.1 +16.9 +42.9 +45.9 +20.8 +7.0

Baird Funds: AggBdInst 10.84 -.06 +7.1 +31.9 CoreBdInst 11.03 -.04 +6.7 +36.7 IntMuBdInst 11.97 -.06 +5.8 +16.5 ShtTBdInst 9.68 ... +2.1 +14.5

Baron Fds Instl: Growth SmallCap

54.12 +2.13 +2.1 +59.2 24.44 +.83 -1.3 +57.6

Baron Funds: Asset n Growth SmallCap

48.16 +1.61 0.0 +49.5 53.70 +2.12 +1.8 +58.0 24.25 +.82 -1.5 +56.4

Bernstein Fds: IntDur Ca Mu DivMun NYMun TxMgdIntl IntlPort EmgMkts

13.99 14.83 14.83 14.58 12.06 11.99 24.53

-.09 -.07 -.06 -.05 +.44 +.44 +.84

+5.1 +5.7 +5.3 +5.1 -21.6 -21.7 -22.6

+32.5 +17.6 +16.1 +15.9 +0.8 +0.3 +20.0

Berwyn Funds: Income

13.06 +.13 +2.9 +35.3

BlackRock A: BasValA p CapAppr p EqtyDivid GlbAlA r HlthSciOpp HiYdInvA InflProBdA NatMuniA TotRetA

24.72 22.04 18.65 18.40 30.41 7.62 11.91 10.91 11.42

+.81 +.83 +.58 +.32 +.95 +.05 -.10 -.06 -.05

-2.4 -3.3 +5.3 -4.9 +2.4 +3.7 +11.0 +12.9 +5.2

+36.7 +39.2 +45.1 +22.0 +50.7 +60.4 +31.7 +29.3 +31.2

BlackRock B&C: EquityDivC GlobAlC t

18.24 +.56 +4.5 +42.0 17.10 +.30 -5.6 +19.2

BlackRock Fds Blrk: CapAppr p

22.93 +.87 -2.9 +40.9

BlackRock Instl: InflProtBd US Opps BasValI CoreBond EquityDiv GlbAlloc r CapAppr p HiYldBond NatlMuni S&P500

12.04 34.48 24.90 9.59 18.70 18.50 22.90 7.62 10.90 16.33

-.10 +11.4 +1.22 -7.3 +.82 -2.1 -.04 +5.7 +.58 +5.7 +.32 -4.6 +.87 -3.0 +.05 +4.1 -.07 +13.0 +.59 +5.6

+33.1 +42.2 +38.1 +28.5 +46.5 +22.9 NS +62.0 +30.1 +49.1

BlackRock R: GlblAlloc r

17.77 +.31 -5.2 +20.7

Brandywine Fds: BlueFd 24.00 +.70 -4.5 +26.0 Brandywine 23.19 +.74 -13.6 +19.8 BrownSmCoIns 46.53 +1.90 -0.7 +64.7

Buffalo Funds: SmallCap

27.57 +1.17 +5.3 +43.0

CGM Funds: FocusFd n Realty n

25.33 +.75 -16.2 -5.6 28.95 +1.23 +0.7 +93.1

CRM Funds: MidCapValI

28.23 +.80 -5.0 +38.6

Footnotes T M

S f P N

Institutnl nr Clipper

11.03 +.44 -15.1 +25.9 64.48 +2.13 +0.5 +51.8

Cohen & Steers: InsltRlty n RltyShrs n

43.05 +1.77 +6.0 +104.9 66.33 +2.75 +6.0 +103.5

Columbia Class A: Acorn te AcornIntlA tx BldModAgg p DivEqInc A DivrBd DiviIncoA DivOpptyA FocusEqA t HiYldBond LgCapGrA t LgCorQA p MidCpValA PBModA p SelLgCpGr t StrtIncA TxExA p SelComm A

28.16 35.81 10.38 9.87 5.12 14.15 8.22 23.68 2.78 24.73 6.04 13.29 10.70 12.43 6.13 14.07 43.35

+.73 0.0 +1.04 -12.5 +.21 -0.7 +.33 -1.5 -.03 +6.1 +.48 +8.3 +.25 +4.6 +.82 +7.7 +.01 +4.7 +.91 +3.9 +.22 +8.0 +.42 -3.4 +.16 +0.7 +.45 -5.5 +.03 +5.0 -.07 +11.7 +1.74 +0.5

Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z e AcornIntl Z x AcornUSA e Bond DiviIncomeZ IntmBdZ n IntmTEBd n LgCapGr LgCapIdxZ MarsGrPrZ MidCapGr Z MidCpIdxZ MdCpVal p STIncoZ STMunZ SmlCapIdxZ n SmCapVal SCValuIIZ ValRestr n CRAQlInv np

29.18 35.89 29.02 9.61 14.16 9.37 10.90 12.56 25.82 22.09 25.99 11.29 13.31 9.92 10.54 17.07 41.22 13.86 45.82 11.21

+.76 +.91 +1.09 -.05 +.48 -.05 -.06 +.45 +.94 +.73 +.98 +.36 +.42 -.01 -.01 +.64 +1.35 +.50 +1.51 -.04

+0.3 -12.2 -0.7 +6.8 +8.5 +6.1 +7.9 -5.3 +5.7 +6.0 -5.0 -0.4 -3.2 +1.2 +1.7 +3.1 -4.8 -1.6 -6.5 +5.8

m m

B F

CoreFxInco LgGrw LgVal n ComdyRetA t

+2.45 +1.52 +.71 +.58 +.02

+4.8 +6.5 +6.6 -11.2 +3.1

+60.4 +70.0 +48.6 +29.9 +36.8

Fidelity Freedom: FF2000 n FF2010 n FF2010K FF2015 n FF2015A FF2015K FF2020 n FF2020A FF2020K FF2025 n FF2025A FF2025K FF2030 n FF2030K FF2035 n FF2035A FF2035K FF2040 n FF2040K FF2045 n FF2045K FF2050 n FF2050K FreeIncK IncomeFd n

12.12 13.49 12.35 11.26 11.42 12.40 13.55 11.82 12.72 11.18 11.28 12.74 13.28 12.84 10.91 11.03 12.82 7.61 12.85 8.98 12.95 8.83 12.95 11.47 11.46

+59.8 +38.7 +38.4 +41.2 +28.6 +47.7 +62.6 +47.7 +46.8 +50.0 +56.0 +50.0 Fidelity Invest: +36.7 AllSectEq 11.96 +49.4 AMgr50 n 15.58 +34.5 AMgr70 nr 16.14 +27.7 AMgr20 nr 13.02 +47.6 Balanc 19.04 BalancedK 19.04 +61.2 BlueChipGr 46.01 +40.2 BluChpGrF n 46.12 +61.6 BluChpGrK 46.07 12.73 +26.4 CA Mun n 49.17 +48.8 Canada n +33.5 CapApp n 27.88 +21.4 CapApprK 27.92 +50.6 CapDevelO 10.87 +49.6 CapInco nre 8.94 +50.6 ChinaReg r 25.60 +62.3 Contra n 73.65 +62.3 ContraK 73.63 +51.1 CnvSec 23.66 +11.7 DisEq n 22.32 +6.0 DiscEqF 22.31 +59.7 +41.2 +54.8 +38.2 +18.9

+.06 +.21 +.18 +.17 +.17 +.19 +.24 +.20 +.23 +.25 +.24 +.28 +.31 +.29 +.30 +.29 +.35 +.21 +.36 +.26 +.37 +.26 +.38 +.06 +.07

+1.7 -0.1 0.0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.1 -1.0 -1.2 -0.8 -2.0 -2.4 -1.9 -2.5 -2.3 -3.9 -4.0 -3.7 -4.0 -3.8 -4.4 -4.2 -4.8 -4.6 +1.9 +1.9

+.45 +1.5 +.23 +0.6 +.36 -1.8 +.04 +3.0 +.44 +3.8 +.44 +3.9 +1.70 +2.9 +1.71 +3.1 +1.70 +3.0 -.07 +11.2 +1.08 -13.5 +.83 +8.3 +.83 +8.5 +.37 -1.0 +.06 -0.8 +.52 -19.6 +2.48 +7.9 +2.47 +8.0 +.41 -6.3 +.90 -2.2 +.90 -2.0

+24.5 +32.8 NS +33.4 +33.7 NS +36.2 +36.7 NS +36.4 +37.3 NS +37.0 NS +35.9 +37.3 NS +36.3 NS +36.2 NS +36.1 NS NS +23.9 +47.6 +36.5 +38.7 +27.4 +42.9 +43.5 +60.3 NS +61.1 +26.2 +17.7 +59.4 +60.3 +48.8 +59.2 +16.6 +53.3 +53.8 +46.8 +29.6 NS

500Idx I IntlIndxInv TotMkIdxF r TotMktIndInv USBond I

47.18 29.17 38.30 38.29 11.89

+1.72 +1.01 +1.39 +1.38 -.07

+5.9 NS -16.9 +12.9 +4.6 NS +4.5 +52.1 +6.4 NS

Fidelity Spart Adv: ExtMktAdv r 500IdxAdv 500Index I IntlAdv r TotlMktAdv r USBond I

37.20 47.18 47.18 29.18 38.29 11.89

+1.32 +1.72 +1.71 +1.01 +1.38 -.07

-0.8 +5.9 +5.9 -16.8 +4.6 +6.3

+61.5 +50.1 NS +13.0 +52.2 NS

+1.12 +.44 +.05 +.40

-1.8 -7.7 -14.7 +4.0

+37.4 +30.0 +24.7 +38.8

First Eagle: GlobalA OverseasA SoGenGold p US ValuA t

45.66 20.42 26.33 17.04

IntlEqGS4

11.05 +.41 -19.0 +14.5

Harbor Funds: Bond CpAppInv p CapAppInst n HiYBdInst r IntlInv t IntlAdmin p IntlGr nr Intl nr

12.67 39.87 40.45 10.82 53.03 53.19 10.62 53.58

EmgMkts r IntlEqty

Hartford Fds C:

11.18 -.02 +2.8 +17.4

Frank/Temp Frnk A: AdjUS p AZ TFA p BalInv p CAHYBd p CalInsA p CalTFrA p EqIncA p FedInterm p FedTxFrA p FlexCapGrA FlRtDA p FL TFA p FoundFAl p GoldPrM A GrowthA p HY TFA p HiIncoA IncoSerA p InsTFA p MichTFA p MO TFA p NJTFA p NY TFA p NC TFA p OhioITFA p ORTFA p PA TFA p RisDivA p SMCpGrA StratInc p TotlRtnA p USGovA p UtilitiesA p

8.88 11.36 39.25 10.36 12.72 7.40 16.96 12.40 12.50 47.30 8.96 11.90 10.06 30.54 47.17 10.71 1.96 2.09 12.42 12.22 12.62 12.54 12.01 12.80 12.93 12.45 10.80 35.99 35.29 10.25 10.22 6.89 13.76

-.02 +2.1 -.06 +12.1 +1.33 -5.0 -.06 +19.2 -.08 +12.4 -.03 +13.0 +.57 +3.1 -.09 +9.5 -.07 +11.6 +1.80 +1.5 -.01 +2.1 -.06 +9.7 +.27 -5.1 +.66 -27.0 +1.44 +4.1 -.07 +13.5 +.01 +4.2 +.04 +0.2 -.07 +10.6 -.05 +8.3 -.08 +10.9 -.08 +10.8 -.06 +9.3 -.08 +10.5 -.10 +9.6 -.08 +10.0 -.07 +10.9 +1.02 +6.2 +1.28 -2.6 +.07 +2.1 -.02 +4.3 ... +4.3 +.36 +16.0

+6.2 +24.9 +40.0 +45.4 +25.9 +29.4 +46.4 +24.0 +26.8 +45.1 +23.9 +23.5 +34.1 +18.0 +50.6 +36.2 +46.4 +44.3 +24.0 +19.8 +24.7 +24.2 +21.5 +24.1 +19.8 +23.8 +24.7 +52.1 +56.9 +33.3 +31.5 +18.8 +59.4

CapAppC t FltRateC tx

FlexBondT Grw&IncT n HiYldT r Janus T OverseasT r PerkMCVal T PerkSCVal T ResearchT n ShTmBdT Twenty T

10.81 31.53 8.90 29.56 30.94 20.47 20.63 29.85 3.08 57.44

NA NA

+.95 +.19 +.65 +.47 ... +.70

-8.1 +0.2 +1.7 +6.9 +2.9 -3.3

+20.6 +29.9 +38.9 +52.0 +32.2 +46.3

26.78 +.84 -8.8 +18.0 8.71 ... +2.1 +29.4

BondA p LgCpEqA StrIncA p

15.84 -.04 +5.3 +46.3 24.99 +1.18 -2.8 +30.5 6.48 +.02 +1.4 +41.2

John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggress LSBalance LS Conserv LSGrowth LS Moder

11.72 12.70 13.01 12.44 12.71

Keeley Funds:

DivGthI n

SmCpValA p LSV ValEq n

19.42 +.66 +2.1 +40.1

Hartford Fds Y: +1.04 +.96 +.67 +.01 -.05

-7.7 -7.9 +2.3 +3.1 +6.4

+22.1 +21.6 +40.8 +33.3 +28.2

39.03 20.07 26.97 20.11 42.87 11.10 25.78 18.36 11.97

+1.31 +.68 +1.11 +.45 +1.50 +.37 +.94 +.81 -.05

-6.8 +2.2 +0.7 +3.5 +4.3 -12.2 -3.3 -3.1 +6.5

+32.8 +41.6 +51.1 +40.3 +50.7 +23.4 +48.4 +57.4 +29.7

+.38 +.25 +.07 +.34 +.15

-4.6 -0.7 +3.3 -2.9 +2.0

+37.3 +37.7 +35.0 +37.4 +38.5

24.05 +.98 -4.3 +42.3 13.49 +.52 -1.6 +39.4

Laudus Funds:

MCapGrP p SmlCoGrI n

33.41 +1.05 -8.8 +62.0 13.52 +.64 -1.4 +51.4

Munder Funds A: MdCpCGr t

29.49 +1.21 +1.8 +61.0

MdCpCGrY n 30.20 +1.25 +2.0 +62.2

Mutual Series: BeaconZ EuropZ GblDiscovA GlbDiscC GlbDiscZ QuestZ SharesZ

12.05 18.87 27.35 27.07 27.71 16.59 20.50

Nationwide Serv: 8.99 +.25 -1.9 +33.5

Neuberger&Berm Fds: EqIncInst Genesis n GenesInstl Guardn n HiIncBdInst LgCapV Inv n

11.14 33.59 47.19 14.75 9.01 24.86

Nicholas nx

Genesis n

44.33 +.63 +4.0 +57.4

Northern Funds:

Intl I

Nuveen Cl A:

IntlOppA p

Longleaf Partners:

CBEqBldrA 13.92 CBAggGr p 118.41 CBAppr p 14.72 CBFdAllCV A 12.91 WAIntTmMu 6.71 WAMgMuA p 16.87

Legg Mason C:

CapApprec p 38.67 +1.29 -7.1 +31.8

WAIntTMuC WAMgMuC CMValTr p

18.21 +.61 -17.9 +3.7

Hotchkis & Wiley: MidCpVal

24.85 +1.00 +3.5 +79.3

Hussman Funds: StrTotRet r StrGrowth ICM SmlCo

12.45 -.03 +4.5 +17.4 11.73 -.24 -4.8 -8.9 27.27 +.95 +0.3 +50.3

+.46 +8.9 +4.87 +2.4 +.54 +6.5 +.42 -4.4 -.03 +10.2 -.10 +13.4

+44.3 +61.3 +42.1 +32.5 +22.4 +29.1

6.72 -.03 +9.5 +20.2 16.88 -.10 +12.8 +27.0 38.91 +1.39 +1.5 +30.6 12.31 +.43 -20.9 +12.7

Partners Intl n SmCap

26.95 +1.06 -7.8 +42.4 11.10 +.41 -25.9 -4.2 26.73 +.77 -1.6 +69.1

+53.1 +52.5 +53.4 +40.4 +49.8 +30.5

Nicholas Group:

Litman Gregory Fds:

Legg Mason A:

+1.3 +1.5 +1.7 -3.5 +2.4 -10.1

48.93 +1.32 +1.4 +52.2

Henderson Glbl Fds:

EmgMktOp p 17.67 +.46 -14.4 +33.4

Hartford HLS IB: ValueInv 38.79 +1.24 -7.1 +42.4 ValPlusInv p 27.96 +1.02 -4.3 +47.1

+.24 +.91 +1.27 +.51 +.06 +.93

Lazard Instl: Lazard Open:

+34.9 +17.7 +22.4 +19.8 +23.5 +26.4 +36.0

11.00 10.30 10.57 7.12 10.80 8.81 16.53 16.64 8.25 11.31 10.66 15.15 16.37 11.05

AllAstAuth t All Asset p CommodRR p HiYldA LowDurA RealRetA p ShortTrmA p TotRtA

8.23 11.26 10.85 9.91

-.07 +.30 -.05 +.01 -.07 +.36 +.51 +.51 +.29 +.32 -.02 +.37 +.47 -.09

NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA

NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA

HYldMuBd p 16.42 -.03 +19.7 +51.8 AAMuB p 11.43 -.07 +14.5 +37.0 LtdMBA p 11.20 -.03 +4.8 +14.9

Nuveen Cl C: 16.40 -.04 +19.0 +49.2

10.26 11.69 6.04 9.14 10.45 12.35 9.80 11.26

+6.0 +6.0 +5.5 +4.8

+66.0 +30.7 +27.4 +30.4

+.09 +.11 +.07 +.05 -.02 -.10 -.01 -.05

+1.3 +0.2 -18.5 +3.5 +2.0 +11.8 +0.9 +5.6

+30.5 +35.6 +29.4 +51.6 +17.1 +39.2 +6.8 +29.0

9.14 +.05 +3.6 +52.1

PIMCO Funds C: AllAstAut t AllAssetC t LwDurC nt RealRetC p TotRtC t

10.14 11.53 10.45 12.35 11.26

CommodRR p LowDurat p RealRtn p TotlRtn p

6.06 10.45 12.35 11.26

+0.5 -0.6 +1.7 +11.3 +4.8

+27.7 +32.6 +15.9 +37.1 +26.2

+.07 -.02 -.10 -.05

-18.6 +2.0 +11.8 +5.7

+29.4 +17.4 +39.3 +29.5

+.11 +.09 +.07 +.22 -.02 -.10 -.05

+0.5 +1.6 -18.3 -3.6 +2.2 +12.2 +5.9

+37.5 +32.2 +31.0 +38.9 +18.1 +40.6 +30.3

PIMCO Funds P: AllAsset AstAllAuthP CommdtyRR EmgLocalP LowDurP RealRtnP TotRtnP

11.79 10.32 6.16 10.22 10.45 12.35 11.26

Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n

Pax World: Balanced

22.24 +.48 -2.9 +28.2

Paydenfunds: GNMA HiInc

10.79 -.03 +6.3 +23.7 6.99 +.05 +4.3 +39.7

Perm Port Funds: Permanent

46.58 +.31 -1.9 +38.6

Pioneer Funds A: CullenVal HighYldA p PionFdA p StratIncA p ValueA p

17.58 9.73 39.12 10.82 11.14

+.58 +.10 +1.33 +.01 +.45

-3.3 -1.6 -3.9 +3.2 -0.6

+26.9 +53.0 +33.8 +37.7 +28.3

Pioneer Funds C: PioneerFdY StratIncC t

MidCGIII In MidCV1 In PreSecs In SGI In SmCV2 In SAMBalA SAMGrA p

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name 10.68 13.13 9.84 10.87 9.37 12.98 13.76

+.44 +.45 +.02 +.44 +.35 +.26 +.38

39.28 +1.34 -3.6 +35.5 10.58 ... +2.5 +34.8

GlbBdR t LSBondI

Nuveen Cl I:

Pioneer Fds Y:

DivValueI

CullenVal Y

17.64 +.58 -3.0 +28.3

GrowthA HiYldA p MidCpGrA NatResA STCorpBdA SmallCoA p 2020FocA UtilityA

19.83 5.43 30.31 41.33 11.44 20.59 15.08 11.15

+.71 +.02 +1.22 +1.36 ... +.79 +.53 +.30

GrowthZ MidCapGrZ SmallCoZ

20.68 +.76 +7.3 +50.8 31.46 +1.27 +6.3 +65.4 21.55 +.83 -1.9 +56.2

Putnam Funds A: AAGthA p CATxA p DvrInA p EqInA p GeoBalA GrInA p HiYdA p InvA p MultiCpGr NYTxA p TxExA p TFHYA USGvA p VoyA p

12.33 8.22 7.41 15.33 12.43 13.20 7.50 13.36 51.69 8.86 8.94 12.45 13.71 20.61

+.36 -1.7 -.04 +13.3 +.02 -3.7 +.59 +0.3 +.23 +3.3 +.49 -1.4 +.04 NA +.49 +3.3 +1.97 +0.3 -.05 +10.1 -.05 +11.5 -.05 +15.0 ... NA +.78 -8.6

Rainier Inv Mgt: SmMCap SmMCpInst

33.19 +1.15 -1.4 +54.5 34.12 +1.18 -1.2 +55.7

RidgeWorth Funds: GScUltShBdI HighYldI IntmBondI InvGrTEBI n LgCpValEqI MdCValEqI SmCpValI TotRetBd I

10.14 9.51 10.56 12.61 12.82 10.24 12.75 10.91

-.02 +.04 -.04 -.08 +.44 +.30 +.37 -.09

+1.3 +1.3 +5.1 +8.4 +0.6 -5.3 -2.9 +8.4

+6.2 +41.3 +19.0 +21.8 +43.3 +59.3 +57.5 +26.2

+.46 +.38 +.61 +.64 +.35 +.35 +.48

-16.0 -4.1 -3.3 +5.3 -1.2 -12.0 -6.2

+38.7 +47.8 +50.9 +43.7 +46.4 +35.2 +33.0

+.47 +.32 +.94 +1.34 -.08 +1.08 +1.08

-17.5 -10.8 -17.8 -3.8 +5.5 +0.7 +4.7

+31.0 +29.6 +9.9 +65.5 +37.9 +39.5 +48.7

Royce Funds: LowPrSkSvc r PennMuI rn PremierI nr SpeclEqInv r TotRetI rx ValuSvc t ValPlusSvc

14.03 11.02 18.84 20.52 12.85 10.69 12.52 16.22 8.06 26.25 35.34 11.18 28.06 31.37

Russell Instl I: StratBd x

11.05 -.07 +5.7 +38.3

Russell LfePts A:

HiDivEqI nr

BalStrat p

13.22 +.40 +8.2 +46.1

DFA Funds: +.19 +.18 +.35 +.36

-2.4 -18.7 +2.0 +0.5

+31.9 +16.0 +52.6 +51.4

+1.17 -5.4 +1.11 +1.0 +.03 +4.0 -.05 +10.6 +.01 +4.1

+35.0 +35.8 +47.5 +24.9 +21.5

BalStrat

33.53 32.97 4.70 9.36 8.94

MgdFutStr n CoreFxInA n EmMktDbt n HiYld n IntMuniA IntlEqA n LgCGroA n LgCValA n S&P500E n TaxMgdLC n

150.94 +5.47 +5.8 +49.7

DWS Invest S: CoreEqtyS 16.53 +.63 -0.9 +44.4 GNMA S 15.60 +.01 +4.4 +21.2 HiYldTx n 12.76 -.04 +13.3 +33.5 MgdMuni S 9.37 -.05 +10.8 +25.5 ShtDurPlusS 9.25 +.01 +0.5 +13.2

EmgMkt SP500 n CoreEqty DivEqtySel FunUSLInst r IntlSS r 1000Inv r S&P Sel n SmCapSel TotBond TSM Sel r

Davis Funds C: 32.61 +1.09 -1.7 +31.9

Davis Funds Y: 34.27 +1.16 -0.7 +36.0

Dimensional Fds: EmMkCrEq nx 17.36 EmgMktVal x 25.90 GlbRESec n 8.58 IntSmVa nx 13.40 LargeCo x 10.44 STExtQual nx 10.85 STMuniBd nx 10.31 TAWexUSCr nx 7.64 TAUSCorEq2 x 8.97 TM USSm x 23.04 USVectrEq nx 10.62 USLgVa nx 19.81 USLgVa3 nx 15.16 US Micro nx 13.73 US TgdVal x 15.67 US Small nx 21.38 US SmVal x 24.07 IntlSmCo nx 13.73 GlbEqInst x 12.47 EmgMktSCp nx18.38 EmgMkt nx 23.74 Fixd nx 10.33 ST Govt nx 10.82 IntGvFxIn nx 13.04 IntlREst 4.78 IntVa nx 13.84 IntVa3 nx 12.93 InflProSecs x 12.66 Glb5FxInc x 11.13 LrgCapInt nx 16.26 TM USTgtV x 20.68 TM IntlValue x 11.39 TMMktwdeV x 14.91 TMUSEq x 14.18 2YGlFxd nx 10.10 DFARlEst nx 25.39

+.39 +.69 +.31 +.31 +.32 -.03 -.01 +.16 +.29 +.83 +.36 +.72 +.55 +.53 +.51 +.74 +.83 +.25 +.36 +.27 +.59 -.01 -.04 -.18 +.13 +.30 +.28 -.24 -.07 +.31 +.68 +.26 +.53 +.44 -.03 +.94

-19.3 +30.6 -24.1 +21.7 +2.2 +86.4 -19.8 +18.6 +5.8 +49.9 +2.2 +16.6 +1.5 +6.5 -19.2 +18.4 +0.4 +51.5 +0.3 +54.4 -2.2 +51.9 -3.0 +48.2 -2.8 +48.8 +0.7 +58.7 -3.9 +53.3 -0.1 +62.8 -2.8 +58.0 -17.4 +29.1 -6.9 +38.8 -19.6 +41.6 -17.4 +31.0 +0.5 +3.3 +2.2 +11.9 +8.1 +24.5 -7.6 +57.7 -22.1 +8.3 -22.0 +8.9 +13.0 +37.4 +3.6 +17.3 -16.4 +13.4 -2.7 +55.7 -21.9 +8.1 -1.8 +50.4 +4.5 +50.0 +0.7 +4.3 +9.6 +110.2

+2.13 +.33 -.05 +1.23 +4.38

-0.3 -11.5 +4.6 -18.5 -2.1

+38.7 +32.0 +27.2 +18.4 +41.8

11.17 -.04 NA 11.19 -.02 +8.4 11.18 -.02 +8.2

NS NS NS

Dodge&Cox: 70.41 7.86 13.64 28.93 106.77

DoubleLine Funds:

Dreyfus: Aprec BasicS&P BondMktInv p CalAMTMuZ Dreyfus DreyMid r Drey500In t IntmTIncA Interm nr IntlStkI MunBd r NY Tax nr OppMCVal A SmlCpStk r DreihsAcInc

41.68 27.22 11.02 15.21 9.04 27.37 36.50 13.87 14.17 12.49 11.74 15.42 27.69 20.57 10.41

+1.41 +5.5 +.99 +5.8 -.07 +6.0 -.12 +11.5 +.32 -0.1 +.89 -0.8 +1.32 +5.4 -.09 +5.9 -.07 +7.8 +.36 -11.0 -.07 +10.3 -.07 +9.5 +1.11 -6.2 +.76 +3.0 ... -2.6

+50.5 +49.6 +22.1 +24.4 +44.6 +60.8 +48.2 +35.7 +21.0 +23.9 +23.7 +23.2 +56.5 +59.4 +12.9

Dupree Mutual: KYTF EVPTxMEmI

7.99 -.06 +8.4 +19.6 42.49 +1.18 -16.2 +32.2

Eaton Vance A: GblMacAbR p 9.77 FloatRate 9.22 IncBosA 5.74 LgCpVal 17.84 NatlMunInc 9.86 Strat Income Cl A7.93

+.03 -.01 +.02 +.63 -.01 +.03

-0.4 +2.5 +4.1 +0.3 +14.4 +1.1

+11.7 +32.1 +53.0 +30.2 +32.0 +24.8

Eaton Vance C: NatlMunInc

9.86 -.01 +13.5 +29.0

Eaton Vance I: AtlCapSMID FltgRt GblMacAbR IncBost LgCapVal ParStEmMkt EdgwdGInst n

17.02 8.92 9.76 5.74 17.89 13.04 12.68

+.52 -.01 +.03 +.02 +.62 +.37 +.41

+7.3 +2.8 -0.1 +4.3 +0.5 -17.1 +9.9

+68.4 +33.2 +12.6 +54.2 +31.2 +27.7 +34.9

FMI Funds: CommonStk LargeCap p

24.77 +.72 +4.3 +55.5 16.17 +.53 +3.5 +44.1

FPA Funds: Capit NewInc FPACres n Fairholme

40.39 +1.02 -8.3 +48.9 10.67 ... +1.5 +8.6 27.29 +.67 +0.7 +33.4 27.44 +1.88 -7.8 +20.9

Federated A: KaufmA p MuniUltshA StrValDiv p TtlRtBd p

5.08 +.21 -6.1 +35.6 10.05 ... +1.3 +4.5 4.83 +.13 +8.1 +54.3 11.42 -.03 +5.2 +25.5

Federated Funds: MidCapI Svc 21.17 +.69 -0.7 +61.0 TtlRtnBdSvc 11.42 -.03 +5.4 +26.4

Federated Instl: 9.76 5.08 10.05 11.42 9.17 4.85

+.03 +.20 ... -.03 ... +.14

+6.5 -6.1 +0.9 +5.7 +1.3 +8.6

9.73 11.79 11.77 33.03 16.72 21.46 21.19 12.27

... +.27 +.32 +1.09 +.56 +.72 +.61 +.02

+2.0 -2.7 -4.1 -5.1 -6.6 +6.9 -11.0 +3.1

EqGrI n FltRateI n GroIncI LgCapI n MidCpII I n NewInsightI SmallCapI

62.74 9.71 18.29 19.38 16.98 21.75 22.37

+2.62 ... +.61 +.73 +.57 +.74 +.64

+5.4 +2.1 +5.4 +2.9 -6.4 +7.2 -10.7

+52.1 +35.6 +3.1 +27.5 +10.6 +55.5

-.05 +.16 +.02 -.06 +.25 +.90 +.59 +1.33 +.48

+6.9 +4.5 +4.2 +7.8 -18.2 +6.4 +0.5 +5.7 +4.0

+39.9 +49.2 +64.1 +21.7 +13.2 +51.4 +41.5 +49.9 +45.3

17.94 +.56 -19.7 +25.0 21.75 +.63 +5.9 +49.7

Schwab Funds:

33.89 +1.14 -0.9 +35.0

Diamond Hill Fds:

11.33 11.29 7.30 11.70 7.30 23.72 16.43 36.56 12.77

SSgA Funds:

Davis Funds A:

Diver Inc p 9.27 -.03 +5.2 +36.5 SMIDCapGr 23.62 +.79 +3.1 +90.4 LtdTrmDvrA 8.94 -.01 +2.8 +17.1

22.24 -.37 -15.0 -19.4

SEI Portfolios:

DWS Invest Instl:

Delaware Invest A:

10.02 +.19 -4.2 +30.5

Rydex Investor:

DWS Invest A:

CoreFxdInc I TRBd I TRBd N p

10.12 +.19 -3.5 +33.6

Russell LfePts C:

Glb6040Ins x 12.49 IntlCoreEq nx 8.95 USCoreEq1 nx 11.25 USCoreEq2 nx 11.03

Balanced n GblStock IncomeFd Intl Stk Stock

+41.5 +29.9 +49.2 +40.4 +35.9 +37.0 NA +46.5 +45.2 +24.8 +27.6 +41.1 NA +35.3

RSNatRes np 33.11 +1.21 -12.6 +33.0 RSPartners 30.30 +.67 -5.5 +50.4

EmerMkts GlobEq IntlDevMkt RESec StratBd x USCoreEq USQuan

7.47 +.10 -22.6 +3.9

NYVen C

+49.4 +51.0 +64.0 +12.9 +18.2 +55.1 +35.2 +59.1

Prudential Fds Z&I:

Cullen Funds:

NYVen A

+6.8 +4.5 +5.9 -24.8 +2.4 -2.3 -3.7 +5.0

Prudential Fds A:

CommRet t

Eqty500IL

+60.4 +58.3 +57.2 +77.2 +53.2 +37.6 +39.4

Russell Funds S:

7.40 +.10 -22.9 +3.1

DSmCaVal EqtyDivdA HiIncA MgdMuni p StrGovSecA

-4.3 -1.3 +2.7 +1.8 -2.5 +1.5 +0.2

RS Funds: 27.50 +.89 +5.5 +44.2

HYMunBd t

13.77 +.51 +4.3 +49.2

+.09 +.11 -.02 -.10 -.05

PIMCO Funds D:

Loomis Sayles: 16.51 -.02 +0.1 +29.9 14.32 +.11 +2.0 +48.2

+.32 -.05 -.07 -.05

PIMCO Funds Admin: HiYldAd np

Neuberger&Berm Tr:

17.28 +.45 -14.1 +34.7

-2.8 -11.7 -5.3 -6.0 -5.0 -3.3 -2.8

IntIdx I n 6.17 +.23 -17.0 +12.0 NwBdIdxI n 11.78 -.07 +6.2 +23.4 S&P500Instl n 11.13 +.41 +5.7 +49.6

BondIdx EmgMEqIdx FixIn n HiYFxInc n IntTaxEx n IntlEqIdx r MMEmMkt r MMGlbRE r MMIntlEq r MMMidCap ShIntTaxFr SmlCapVal n StockIdx n TxExpt n

Heartland Fds:

+.32 +.44 +.70 +.69 +.71 +.41 +.54

Nationwide Instl:

IDModAgg

StksPlus TotRet n TR II n TRIII n

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

PIMCO Funds A:

Munder Funds Y:

IntFxInInst r 11.68 -.08 -1.8 +20.8 IntlMsterS r 16.87 +.62 -14.0 +36.3 USLgCapGr r 13.72 +.54 +7.9 +59.2 EmgMktI

Hartford HLS IA : CapApp Div&Grwth GrwthOpp Advisers Stock IntlOpp MidCap SmallCo TotalRetBd

+30.7 +33.0 +47.9 +39.2 -3.9 +34.2 +40.6 +50.5 +12.4 +29.5

John Hancock A:

30.28 9.37 19.47 13.87 8.72 19.07

32.93 30.31 19.77 8.73 11.04

+6.6 +0.8 +3.8 +1.2 -28.4 -3.9 -3.0 +0.1 +1.5 +5.4

QualGrowth I 27.73 +1.02 +1.3 +43.6 QualityGrthJ 27.71 +1.02 +1.0 +42.4

Hartford Fds I: CapAppY n CapAppI n DivGrowthY n FltRateI x TotRetBdY nx

-.06 +1.02 +.03 +.94 +1.42 +.50 +.53 +1.07 -.01 +2.25

Jensen Funds:

44.00 +1.39 NA 13.53 +.49 NA

AbsolStratI r

15.34 +.58 +3.9 +48.1

+27.4 +48.1 +49.8 +40.1 +27.1 +27.5 +13.9 +28.5

Hartford Fds A:

Forum Funds:

GroIncA p

+4.5 +6.6 +7.0 +4.3 -13.9 -13.8 -12.7 -13.5

Harding Loevner:

CapAppA p Chks&Bal p DivGthA p EqtyInc t FltRateA px MidCapA p

First Investors A

-.03 +1.45 +1.47 +.05 +1.75 +1.75 +.35 +1.76

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Credit Suisse Comm:

Fidelity Advisor I:

m

58.63 38.73 21.15 20.34 12.26

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

Credit Suisse ABCD:

NwInsghts tn 20.28 +.68 +6.1 StratIncC nt 12.24 +.02 +2.3

NS F

EqGrT p GrOppT NwInsghts p SmlCapT p StrInT

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

8.71 -.05 +6.5 +32.2 15.53 +.54 +4.0 +49.2 8.85 +.30 -0.7 +41.8

Fidelity Advisor C:

w

12.41 +.02 +3.3 +37.7

Fidelity Advisor T:

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

CG Cap Mkt Fds:

FltRateA r FF2030A p FF2040A p LevCoStA p MidCpIIA p NwInsghts p SmallCapA p StrInA

F

NA

Causeway Intl:

Fidelity Advisor A:

NE D NN F

+21.8 +29.5 +32.8 +35.8 +36.8 +40.4 +37.3 +41.5 +19.9 +19.1

Inco p 15.98 -.09 +1.6 +23.7 ShDurIncA t 16.07 +.01 +1.0 +12.6 SocEqA p 35.58 +1.28 +0.1 +46.0

HighYldBd r KaufmanR MunULA p TotRetBond UltShortBd StaValDivIS

F

E

R

-6.3 -4.3 -1.9 -1.2 -0.9 -5.4 -6.1 -5.2 +3.8 +3.5

LongShortI n 17.18 +.41 +2.1 +17.3

Arbitrage I n 13.04 +.03 +2.8 ArbitrageR p 12.80 +.03 +2.5

GlbHiInco t GlbHiIncI r IntlEqI r IntlEqA IntlEqII I r TotRet I

StrInI +.32 +.19 +.77 +.77 +.76 +1.80 +1.60 +1.97 +.11 +.12

Calvert Invest:

NYVenY

Arbitrage Funds:

Apprec Ariel n

16.94 10.53 31.42 31.34 30.65 48.83 43.73 53.58 12.23 12.35

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt Name

“109 Ways to Discover Central Oregon” wi not just te readers about what this region has to offer; it wi show them how to fu y experience Centra Oregon, ensuring their visit to the area is as unique as it is unforgettab e.

Pick up a copy at these locations:

17.61 13.76 9.84 14.40 37.57 20.83 19.85 9.66 24.05

+.63 +.51 +.36 +.55 +1.35 +.76 +.82 -.05 +.87

+2.5 +5.6 +1.8 -16.4 +4.7 +5.9 -0.4 +6.1 +4.8

+41.1 +47.1 +56.3 +12.1 +50.1 +49.8 +59.7 +22.4 +52.1

Scout Funds: Intl MidCap r

The Bulletin • Chambers of Commerce Central Oregon Visitor s Association Oregon Border Kiosks • Bend Visitor and Convention Bureau • Deschutes County Expo Center • Other Points of Interest

28.36 +.89 -13.5 +25.8 13.06 +.40 -3.2 +66.1

Security Funds: MidCapValA

29.88 +1.11 -6.1 +33.9

Selected Funds: AmerShsD AmShsS p

41.11 +1.33 -0.4 +37.3 41.09 +1.33 -0.8 +36.0

Sentinel Group: ComStk A p 32.15 +1.06 +1.7 +42.1 SmCoA p 7.52 +.18 -0.7 +55.6 Sequoia n 153.07 +3.20 +9.9 +59.0

Sit Funds: US Gov n

11.37 -.03 +2.4 +14.1

Sound Shore: SoundShore n 31.41 +1.17 -1.1 +32.1

St FarmAssoc: Balan n Gwth n

IN COOPERATION WITH

GSShDurItl 10.21 +.01 +0.5 +6.9 IbbotsBalSv p 11.89 +.23 -1.8 +30.5 IbbotsModSv p11.78 +.14 +0.7 +28.0

ALSO PUBLISHED ONLINE AT

TARGET:

www.bendbu et n.com

SmCapVal n

and Centra Oregon Area Chambers of Commerce

+.79 -14.4 +15.2 +.79 -14.2 +15.8 +.57 +3.3 +56.1 +1.02 -3.8 +48.5 +1.01 -3.9 +47.7 +.75 -17.3 +25.8 +.63 -21.3 +21.6 +1.38 -1.9 +38.7 +.63 +0.6 +39.4 +1.37 -1.7 +39.3 +.74 +1.6 +37.9 +1.12 +1.5 +39.7 ... +2.3 +22.1 +.01 +5.7 +41.4 +.79 -0.8 +37.1 -.02 +5.4 +23.2 -.07 +6.4 +19.6 +3.44 +5.8 +64.9 +.66 +5.3 +46.3 +3.44 +6.0 NS +3.44 +5.9 +65.7 +.70 -7.3 +41.8 +.05 +3.8 +49.2 +.91 -4.6 +46.8 -.09 +11.9 +33.3 -.04 +4.7 +28.2 -.04 +4.1 +15.3 -.04 +7.3 +18.6 +.96 -15.0 +16.1 -.06 +6.9 +29.4 -.05 +6.9 +33.2 +.36 -4.3 +30.3 +1.30 -16.3 +26.6 +.85 -5.1 +53.5 +1.15 -0.8 +53.7 +1.15 -0.6 +54.3 +2.38 -4.6 +27.1 +2.37 -4.5 +27.6 -.08 +9.9 +23.8 +.39 +7.6 +51.8 +.46 +0.1 +62.7 +.45 +0.3 +63.7 -.08 +10.4 +25.2 +.25 +10.2 +49.2 +1.07 +4.4 +57.5 -.07 +8.8 +22.1 +1.93 -1.8 +55.2 +1.95 -1.7 +56.0 +.34 +8.6 +47.3 +.86 -14.8 +8.0 +.39 +3.6 +42.1 +.39 +3.7 +42.6 +.12 +7.8 +64.1 +1.30 +10.2 +121.9 +.45 +1.7 NS +.14 -22.9 NS +.14 -22.7 NS +.41 -17.7 +25.7 +.42 -17.5 NS +.32 -8.3 NS +.33 -8.0 NS +.27 -8.8 NS +.26 -21.0 NS +.26 -20.8 NS -.07 +7.0 NS -.02 +3.5 +11.0 ... +1.4 NS ... +1.1 +12.3 +.43 +3.4 +73.5 +.54 -1.8 +58.6 +.38 -2.3 +70.7 +.17 -12.5 +41.9 +.49 +2.6 +53.3 +.91 -0.5 +44.0 +.67 -2.5 +60.7 +.29 +5.8 +62.7 +.02 +3.3 +37.5 -.08 +10.8 +25.0 -.05 +6.4 +33.0 +2.58 +3.5 +60.7 -.07 +6.4 NS -.07 +6.2 +23.6 +.56 +8.8 +61.8 +2.39 -3.7 +52.6 +.63 -6.1 +35.5

+20.9 +38.0 +37.7 +53.0 Fidelity Selects: +40.4 Biotech n 97.57 +3.62 +21.2 +49.7 ConStaple 74.56 +2.12 +7.5 +30.7 Electr n 45.90 +2.50 -8.3 +36.8 Energy n 45.37 +1.91 -18.3 EngSvc n 59.39 +1.23 -24.9 +46.4 Gold rn 37.45 +.07 -17.5 +33.8 Health n 129.98 +3.92 +4.4 Materials 64.15 +2.76 -3.8 +62.9 MedEqSys n 26.89 +.87 -5.4 28.69 +1.07 -20.1 +21.9 NatRes rn 80.76 +3.21 +10.1 +45.7 Softwr n 95.11 +3.69 -0.4 +54.3 Tech n +41.5 Fidelity Spartan: +50.9 ExtMktIndInv 37.20 +1.33 -0.8 +31.9 500IdxInv n 47.17 +1.71 +5.8

Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: FdTF Adv GlbBdAdv n GrAdv t HY TF Adv IncomeAdv RisingDiv r TGlbTRAdv TtlRtAdv USGovAdv p

ING Funds Cl A:

-.07 +11.7 +.29 -3.4 +1.44 +4.4 -.07 +13.6 +.04 +0.8 +1.02 +6.4 +.26 -3.3 -.02 +4.6 ... +4.5

+27.2 +25.6 +51.8 +36.6 +45.2 +53.2 +33.2 +32.5 +19.4

Frank/Temp Frnk C: CalTFC t FdTxFC t FoundFAl p HY TFC t IncomeC t NY TFC t RisDvC t StratIncC p USGovC t

7.39 12.49 9.89 10.87 2.11 12.00 35.44 10.24 6.85

-.03 +12.4 -.07 +10.9 +.26 -5.9 -.07 +12.9 +.04 -0.3 -.06 +8.6 +1.00 +5.4 +.06 +1.6 ... +3.8

+27.3 +24.7 +31.1 +33.9 +42.5 +19.6 +48.7 +31.6 +17.2

Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: BeaconA SharesA

11.96 +.31 -3.2 +33.7 20.33 +.54 -3.0 +34.9

Frank/Temp Mtl C: SharesC t

20.10 +.53 -3.7 +32.0

Frank/Temp Temp A: DevMktA p ForeignA p GlBondA p GrowthA p WorldA p

20.41 5.65 12.53 16.22 13.69

+.43 +.17 +.29 +.58 +.46

-18.7 -22.7 -3.7 -12.8 -10.4

+25.5 +13.2 +24.7 +24.1 +25.2

Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: FlexCpGr FrgnAv GrthAv

48.24 +1.84 +1.8 +46.2 5.59 +.17 -22.5 +14.0 16.22 +.58 -12.7 +24.9

Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p

12.56 +.29 -4.0 +23.3

Franklin Mutual Ser: QuestA

16.44 +.40 -3.6 +25.3

Franklin Templ: TgtModA p

13.86 +.26 -2.1 +28.6

GE Elfun S&S: S&S Income n TaxEx Trusts n US Eqty n

11.90 12.20 44.28 41.31

-.05 +7.2 -.08 +10.2 +1.69 +7.4 +1.49 +3.0

+30.5 +23.8 +48.1 +35.7

GE Instl Funds: IntlEq n SmCpEqI

9.48 +.35 -17.6 +6.6 15.68 +.52 +3.3 +62.3

GE Investments: TRFd1 TRFd3 p

16.28 +.37 -1.2 +25.9 16.22 +.36 -1.4 +25.0

GMO Trust: ShtDurColl r USTreas x

5.21 25.00

... ...

NE 0.0

NE +0.4

GMO Trust II: EmergMkt r

10.17 +.34 -21.0

NS

GMO Trust III: CHIE EmgMk r IntlIntrVal Quality

20.56 10.20 17.89 22.98

+.54 +.35 +.62 +.66

-9.4 -20.9 -19.5 +11.4

+10.1 +26.9 +6.1 +46.9

+.15 +.34 +.80 +.59 +.62 +.65 +.66

+9.2 -20.9 -17.5 -11.1 -19.5 +11.4 +11.4

+86.3 +27.1 +12.9 +30.1 +6.3 +47.1 +47.2

+.35 +.35 +.79 +.66 ... +.42

-20.8 -8.6 -17.5 +11.5 +12.2 +10.1

+27.4 -7.1 +12.9 +47.4 +42.2 +50.3

+1.53 +.65 +1.18 +.14

-0.7 +0.9 -2.0 +1.8

+52.6 +47.8 +48.4 +45.1

GMO Trust IV: EmgCnDt EmerMkt IntlCoreEq IntlGrEq IntlIntrVal Quality QualityV

9.49 10.12 24.34 21.22 17.88 22.99 22.99

EmgMkts r FlexEqVI IntlCoreEq Quality StrFixInco USCoreEq

10.13 16.49 24.31 22.99 16.77 12.97

Gabelli Funds: Asset EqInc p SmCapG n Util A p

49.09 21.00 32.79 5.69

Gateway Funds: 26.61 +.43 +2.8 +17.8

Goldman Sachs A: GrthOppsA 22.58 +.78 +4.2 +57.0 MidCapVA p 35.17 +1.23 -3.5 +51.9

Goldman Sachs Inst: CoreFxc GrthOppt HiYield HYMuni n MidCapVal SD Gov ShrtDurTF n SmCapVal

10.52 24.18 7.03 9.10 35.47 10.26 10.64 42.45

-.05 +6.8 +.84 +4.6 +.04 +3.4 -.05 +15.0 +1.24 -3.1 +.01 +0.8 -.02 +3.1 +1.41 +2.7

+34.4 +59.0 +48.3 +42.9 +53.7 +6.6 +10.0 +63.5

GuideStone Funds: +61.3 +49.9

BalAllo GS4 GrEqGS4

GlbR E p

16.13 +.56 -3.3 +50.7

IVA Funds: Intl I r WorldwideA t WorldwideC t Worldwide I r

14.60 15.08 14.95 15.09

+.24 +.30 +.29 +.30

-7.8 -6.8 -7.5 -6.6

+30.3 +28.6 +25.7 +29.5

Invesco Fds Instl: IntlGrow

25.59 +.71 -11.3 +28.0

Invesco Fds Invest: DivrsDiv p

12.50 +.37 +2.7 +46.5

Invesco Funds A: BalRiskA Chart p CmstkA Constl p DevMkt p DivrsDiv p EqtyIncA GlbCoreEq p GrIncA p HiYld p HYMuA IntlGrow MidCpCEq p MidCGth p MuniInA RealEst p SmCpValA t TF IntA p USGovFd

12.23 16.62 15.90 22.57 29.51 12.50 8.63 11.16 19.30 4.16 9.86 25.24 21.54 26.07 13.72 24.98 16.30 11.77 9.36

+.01 +11.5 +.41 -1.0 +.55 +0.6 +.84 -3.7 +.56 -8.8 +.36 +2.5 +.20 +0.8 +.38 -14.7 +.62 +0.5 +.01 +3.8 -.04 +15.6 +.70 -11.7 +.51 -6.8 +1.05 -7.2 -.08 +11.9 +1.03 +7.9 +.74 -1.8 -.06 +7.2 -.07 +6.4

+43.4 +33.0 +47.7 +29.7 +44.1 +46.1 +37.5 +10.2 +41.0 +50.7 +41.6 +26.4 +28.6 +50.8 +31.0 +94.9 +51.9 +19.7 +19.1

Invesco Funds C: BalRiskC EqIncC HYMuC

11.99 ... +10.7 +40.1 8.49 +.18 -0.1 +34.4 9.84 -.04 +14.8 +38.6

Invesco Funds P: SummitP p

12.01 +.40 -0.1 +35.1

Invesco Funds Y: BalRiskY

12.30

... +11.8 +44.5

Ivy Funds: AssetSC t AssetStrA p AssetStrY p AssetStrI r GlNatRsA p HiIncC t HighIncoA p HiIncI r LgCapGrA p LtdTrmA p

22.64 23.37 23.41 23.59 15.14 8.23 8.23 8.23 14.04 11.17

+.40 +.41 +.41 +.42 +.37 +.02 +.02 +.02 +.51 -.02

-6.7 -6.0 -6.0 -5.7 -29.3 +6.7 +7.4 +7.7 +7.1 +2.2

+18.8 +21.4 +21.5 +22.3 -4.7 +50.1 +53.3 +54.4 +41.9 +13.1

+6.5 +2.3 +1.5 +2.4 +1.2 0.0 +9.6 +5.9

+25.7 +46.9 +30.8 +26.8 +35.6 +37.4 +70.6 +65.2

JPMorgan A Class: Core Bond A HighYld p Inv Bal p InvCon p InvGr&InA p InvGrwth p LgCpGrA p MdCpVal p

12.01 7.74 12.39 11.36 12.97 13.59 23.47 25.29

-.05 +.05 +.21 +.11 +.32 +.45 +.93 +.81

JPMorgan C Class: CoreBond pn 12.06 -.06 +5.8 +23.2

JP Morgan Instl: IntTxFrIn n 11.31 -.05 +6.2 +16.3 MidCapVal n 25.72 +.83 +6.4 +67.7

JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond n DiscEqty HighYld r MtgBacked ShtDurBond

12.01 17.03 7.76 11.54 10.98

-.05 +.63 +.04 -.03 -.01

+6.9 +6.3 +2.6 +5.8 +1.5

+27.1 +51.8 +48.2 +30.5 +9.9

JPMorgan Select:

GMO Trust VI:

GatewayA +77.3 +53.9 +55.5 +20.3 +16.4 +14.1 +72.6 +61.7 +45.7 +19.3 +77.2 +70.7

12.51 12.50 47.23 10.75 2.08 35.97 12.40 10.24 6.91

12.20 +.18 +1.5 +36.2 20.51 +.79 +7.6 +55.6

MdCpValu SmCap USEquity n USREstate n

25.49 38.58 10.52 17.73

+.82 +1.24 +.40 +.74

+6.2 +66.5 +6.0 +63.3 +4.0 +45.5 +7.8 +104.9

JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBond n CorePlusBd n EmMkEqSl EqtyInc EqIndx HighYld IntmdTFBd n IntlValSel IntrdAmer LgCapGr MkExpIdx n MtgBckdSl n ShtDurBdSel TxAwRRet n TxAwRRetI n USLCCrPls n

12.00 8.38 20.50 9.71 30.21 7.77 11.32 10.98 24.24 23.43 10.13 11.54 10.98 10.37 10.39 20.97

-.05 -.02 +.71 +.33 +1.10 +.05 -.05 +.43 +.88 +.93 +.35 -.02 -.01 -.02 -.01 +.81

+6.7 +5.8 -14.2 +8.2 +5.8 +2.7 +6.1 -17.9 +3.1 +9.8 -0.2 +5.7 +1.3 +3.8 +4.0 +2.4

+26.4 +33.1 +25.9 +61.0 +49.4 +48.0 +16.1 +13.2 +49.3 +71.6 +58.2 +30.1 +9.2 +15.0 +15.6 +42.6

LSGlblBdI StrInc C LSBondR StrIncA ValueY n

16.67 14.71 14.26 14.63 18.70

-.01 +.19 +.11 +.20 +.63

+0.4 -0.2 +1.7 +0.5 -0.3

+31.1 +43.7 +46.9 +46.9 +35.2

+3.6 +2.9 +3.9 +3.3

+40.3 +37.3 +41.5 +47.4

-.01 +3.0 -.05 +8.9 -.03 +3.0 +.40 -4.0 +.44 -4.7 +.23 -3.8 +.03 +2.9 +1.03 -1.2 -.02 +5.4 -.03 +12.0 +.01 +3.8 +.50 -6.2 +.97 -3.8 -.06 +14.1 +.27 +1.2

+25.5 +23.1 +10.2 +28.5 +36.2 +31.9 +44.0 +67.7 +42.1 +34.0 +21.5 +49.9 +45.1 +32.9 +39.9

Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p InvGrBdC p InvGrBdY LSFxdInc

12.21 12.12 12.22 13.94

+.03 +.03 +.03 +.09

9.13 10.84 15.91 10.90 12.28 10.05 7.75 20.39 2.90 11.60 4.58 16.03 30.40 11.19 11.85

Lord Abbett C: BdDbC p 7.77 +.03 +2.3 +41.2 ShDurIncoC t 4.60 ... +2.9 +18.8

Lord Abbett F: BondDeb ShtDurInco

7.74 +.03 +3.2 +45.1 4.57 ... +3.7 +21.9

Lord Abbett I: SmCapVal

32.28 +1.03 -3.5 +46.4

MFS Funds A: IntlDiverA MITA MIGA BondA EmGrA GvScA GrAllA IntNwDA IntlValA ModAllA MuHiA t ResBondA RschA ReschIntA TotRA UtilA ValueA

12.29 19.81 16.38 13.79 44.70 10.54 13.84 20.60 23.99 13.60 8.05 10.85 26.14 13.12 14.37 16.95 23.42

+.37 NA +.71 +2.2 +.57 +5.2 -.05 +6.0 +1.63 +5.7 -.06 +5.6 +.35 NA +.49 -9.3 +.60 -6.6 +.25 NA -.04 +15.7 -.05 +5.7 +.90 +3.9 +.44 -16.9 +.26 +2.5 +.51 -1.3 +.78 +1.8

NA +39.3 +51.9 +43.6 +49.7 +18.1 NA +47.6 +29.7 NA +39.1 +33.8 +47.3 +19.2 +31.4 +50.8 +35.7

+1.70 +.50 -.06 +.46 +.78

+50.9 +48.7 +34.2 +20.1 +36.6

MFS Funds I: EmgGI IntNwDI n ResrchBdI n ReInT ValueI

46.54 21.16 10.85 13.54 23.53

16.17 +.59 -13.5 +28.9

MainStay Funds A: HiYldBdA LgCpGrA p

5.87 +.03 +5.6 +45.1 7.31 +.29 +2.8 +47.5

MainStay Funds I: EpochGlb r MnStMAP I ICAP SelEq S&P500Idx

15.17 32.02 34.93 30.83

+.45 +1.17 +1.33 +1.12

Manning&Napier Fds: ProBConS n 13.13 +.09 +2.3 +25.2 WorldOppA n 6.67 +.25 -20.5 +15.1

Marsico Funds: Focus p

19.13 +.68 +7.8 +49.4

Matthews Asian: AsiaDivInv r AsianG&IInv China Inv PacTigerInv MergerFd n

13.01 15.85 21.46 20.79 15.77

+.24 +.31 +.47 +.47 +.12

Growth

+46.3 +33.7 +18.1 +39.8 +11.1

44.25 +1.47 +5.7 +69.4

Metro West Fds:

Morgan Stanley A:

9.88 8.58 10.64 10.64 24.41

+.05 ... -.05 -.04 +.76

FocusGroA

Forty Overseas t

MorganStanley Inst:

25.51 +.46 +2.4 +31.6

-6.2 -7.1 -18.8 -9.9 +0.2

Meridian Funds:

Janus S Shrs:

BalancedT n

+44.0 +41.3 +41.7 +48.9

PimcoBond n 10.83 -.05 +5.1 +28.7 TmSqMCpGI n 14.21 +.43 +0.8 +51.9 Bond n 26.69 -.05 +4.6 +43.4

BalGldnRbw

34.82 +1.49 +6.3 +31.5 30.77 +1.42 -28.5 NS

Nuveen Cl Y: 20.92 +.88 +9.3 +113.0

Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r GlobalI r Intl I r IntlSmCp r Oakmark Select

27.71 20.27 16.74 12.30 44.64 29.78

+.68 +.81 +.65 +.32 +1.81 +1.21

+0.1 -9.4 -15.6 -13.6 +5.5 +3.3

+29.2 +28.8 +29.0 +41.5 +56.2 +59.3

-8.7 -8.9 -15.0 +4.9 -18.0

+28.1 +39.0 +17.3 +14.9 +7.9

GlobOpp GlbSMdCap LgCapStrat MuniBond pn RealReturn

7.00 13.87 9.04 12.24 8.91

... +22.8 -.07 +18.3 +.21 -5.3 -.02 +20.6 +1.57 +3.7 +.06 +4.3 +1.01 -14.0 +2.27 +2.6 +.30 -0.7 +.71 -4.3 +1.99 -12.4 +.26 -9.3 +1.14 -9.1 +.02 -0.3 +.38 -24.6 +.04 -3.0 +.33 -15.6 +.98 -11.6 -.05 +9.7 +1.20 +7.2 +.48 +7.8 +.85 -0.1 +.58 +2.4 -.02 +2.1 +.83 -12.3

+51.6 +46.9 +31.5 +56.7 +39.1 +40.4 +39.4 +75.0 +36.0 +41.5 +31.4 +25.2 +37.3 +41.5 +31.0 +22.0 +25.6 +32.5 +24.7 +43.8 +39.8 +47.8 +38.8 +43.2 +31.3

+.10 +.38 +.28 -.06 +.12

Oppenheimer A: AMTFrMuA AMTFrNY ActiveAllA CAMuniA p CapAppA p CapIncA p DevMktA p DiscFd p Equity A EqIncA p GlobalA p GblAllocA GlblOppA GblStrIncoA Gold p IntlBdA p IntlDivA IntGrow p LtdTrmMu MnStFdA MainStrOpA p MnStSCpA p RisingDivA SenFltRtA S&MdCpVlA

7.01 12.02 9.14 8.56 45.83 8.90 30.31 59.36 8.91 23.24 54.51 13.94 27.66 4.13 30.63 6.23 10.32 26.26 14.95 34.40 13.23 20.95 16.19 8.13 29.05

Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 14.63 +.52 +1.5 +35.1 S&MdCpVlB 24.61 +.70 -13.1 +28.0

Oppenheimer C&M: DevMktC t 29.06 +.97 -14.6 +36.5 GblStrIncoC 4.12 +.01 -1.1 +38.4 IntlBondC 6.21 +.04 -3.5 +19.5 LtdTmMuC t 14.89 -.04 +8.8 +22.0 RisingDivC p 14.58 +.52 +1.6 +35.8 SenFltRtC 8.14 -.02 +1.6 +41.2

Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p LtdNYC t RoNtMuC t RoMu A p RoMu C p RcNtlMuA

3.37 3.36 7.33 16.78 16.75 7.35

-.01 ... -.02 -.07 -.07 -.02

+8.8 +8.3 +16.3 +16.9 +15.9 +17.3

+24.3 +22.0 +46.6 +43.9 +40.2 +49.9

Oppenheimer Y: CapApprecY DevMktY IntlBdY IntlGrowY RisingDivY ValueY

47.96 29.99 6.23 26.14 16.57 21.44

+1.64 +1.00 +.04 +.98 +.59 +.71

+4.1 -13.7 -2.7 -11.2 +2.5 -5.2

+40.9 +40.7 +23.1 +34.5 +40.1 +32.8

EmMktI n IntlEqI n MCapGrI n

-0.6 +2.3 +6.2 +6.4 +8.0

+42.1 +31.2 +39.7 +40.8 +38.8

36.06 +1.16 -3.7 +62.0 22.23 +.68 -15.3 +28.9 12.39 +.45 -11.5 +17.9 34.67 +1.10 -8.6 +63.2

OsterweisFd n 26.46 +.64 -3.6 +31.8 StratIncome 11.55 +.01 +4.0 +33.4

PACE Funds P: LgGrEqtyP LgVEqtyP

19.36 +.72 +5.5 +49.8 16.67 +.65 -0.9 +39.9

PIMCO Admin PIMS: RelRetAd p ShtTmAd p TotRetAd n

12.35 -.10 +12.0 +39.9 9.80 -.01 +0.9 +7.0 11.26 -.05 +5.7 +29.6

PIMCO Instl PIMS: AllAssetAut r AllAsset CommodRR DiverInco EmgMktCur EmMktsBd FltgInc r FrgnBdUnd r FrgnBd n GlobalBd n HiYld n InvGradeCp LowDur n ModDur n RERRStg r RealReturn RealRetInstl ShortT

10.33 11.79 6.17 11.71 10.02 11.61 8.49 10.85 10.83 10.08 9.14 10.79 10.45 10.86 5.40 12.30 12.35 9.80

+.09 +.11 +.08 +.03 +.15 +.18 +.09 -.08 -.04 -.07 +.05 -.04 -.02 -.03 +.16 -.23 -.10 -.01

GlbHiYld StratIncY p

9.42 +.05 -2.4 +57.3 10.82 ... +3.6 +38.9

Price Funds Adv: BlChipGr n EqtyInc n Growth pn HiYld n MidCapGro n R2020A p R2030Adv np R2040A pn SmCpValA n TF Income pn

42.72 23.97 35.15 6.58 54.54 16.52 17.23 17.28 35.74 10.40

+1.65 +10.2 +.78 +2.2 +1.33 +9.4 +.02 +2.7 +1.69 +0.1 +.42 0.0 +.52 -0.9 +.56 -1.5 +1.20 +3.2 -.06 +10.5

+56.6 +44.5 +57.4 +48.3 +61.9 +40.7 +42.9 +43.0 +54.0 +23.8

Price Funds R Cl:

Old Westbury Fds:

Optimum Fds Instl: Growth n 77.54 +2.51 +8.5 +53.0 Fixed Inc 9.93 -.04 +6.6 +40.5 Managers Funds: Osterweis Funds:

James Adv Fds:

Janus T Shrs:

-1.2 -0.8 0.0 +5.6

Mairs & Power:

HiYldBdM p LowDurBd TotRetBd TotalRetBondI MontagGr I

20.76 +.23 +4.1 +30.6

+6.1 -9.1 +5.8 -16.7 +2.1

MFS Funds Instl: IntlEqty n

IntmDurMuBd 9.27 -.04 +7.5 +21.0 HYMuniBd 16.42 -.03 +20.0 +52.6 LtdTermR 11.14 -.03 +5.0 +15.5 RealEst

Lord Abbett A: FloatRt p IntrTaxFr ShDurTxFr AffiliatdA p FundlEq BalanStratA BondDebA p DevGthA p IncomeA HYMunBd p ShDurIncoA p MidCapA p RsSmCpA TaxFrA p CapStruct p

Nuveen Cl R:

+1.7 +32.6 +0.6 +37.9 -18.2 +31.4 +6.2 +49.9 -8.4 +17.0 +7.9 +46.3 -1.1 +24.9 +2.7 +45.4 +9.0 +37.2 +4.9 +42.4 +3.9 +53.2 +7.9 +46.0 +2.3 +18.4 +4.3 +27.9 +28.1 +220.9 +25.0 +69.0 +12.3 +41.0 +1.1 +7.8

Ret2020R p Ret2030R n

16.38 +.41 -0.2 +39.5 17.12 +.51 -1.1 +41.8

Price Funds: Balance n BlueChipG n BdEnhIndx n CapApr n DivGro n EmMktB n EmMktS n EqInc n EqIdx n GNM n Growth n GwthIn n HlthSci n HiYld n InstlCpGr n InstHiYld n InstlFltRt n MCEqGr n IntlBd n IntlDis n IntlGr&Inc n IntStk n LatAm n MdTxFr n MediaTl n MidCap n MCapVal n NewAm n N Asia n NewEra n NwHrzn n NewInco n OverSea SF n PSBal n PSGrow n PSInco n RealAssets r RealEst n R2005 n R2010 n R2015 Retire2020 n R2025 R2030 n R2035 n R2040 n R2045 n Ret Income n SciTch n ST Bd n SmCapStk n SmCapVal n SpecGr SpecIn n SumMuInt n TxFree n TxFrHY n TxFrSI n R2050 n VA TF n Value n

19.63 42.85 11.63 21.74 24.40 13.09 28.90 24.03 35.87 10.13 35.54 20.92 38.38 6.60 17.60 9.30 9.98 28.40 9.70 40.30 11.37 12.55 36.45 10.96 52.25 55.67 22.28 33.25 14.78 38.56 34.10 9.76 7.32 19.36 23.16 16.27 10.19 20.38 11.57 15.60 12.06 16.62 12.13 17.36 12.24 17.40 11.59 13.27 26.03 4.83 33.50 35.99 17.77 12.51 11.85 10.39 11.54 5.70 9.71 12.15 23.35

+.43 +1.7 +38.3 +1.67 +10.5 +57.7 -.07 +6.2 +23.8 +.42 +4.9 +45.1 +.77 +4.8 +44.4 +.22 +4.7 +43.7 +.90 -16.8 +26.4 +.78 +2.4 +45.5 +1.30 +5.6 +49.0 +.01 +4.7 +20.6 +1.35 +9.6 +58.4 +.65 +2.2 +44.1 +1.59 +12.2 +92.7 +.03 +2.9 +49.4 +.69 +5.8 +57.1 +.03 +2.7 +48.3 +.01 +2.3 +28.9 +.91 +0.2 +65.5 -.02 -2.9 +18.5 +1.22 -11.1 +41.4 +.42 -16.7 +19.1 +.47 -13.0 +29.1 +.98 -24.7 +19.3 -.05 +10.5 +25.2 +2.15 +5.8 +91.6 +1.72 +0.3 +63.0 +.68 -3.9 +46.1 +1.07 +1.5 +48.6 +.36 -8.2 +45.9 +1.30 -22.0 +10.6 +1.43 +10.5 +96.3 -.06 +5.4 +25.6 +.28 -14.5 +22.0 +.46 +1.0 +40.0 +.71 -0.3 +43.3 +.26 +1.5 +33.9 +.34 -14.3 NS +.83 +8.8 +110.2 +.19 +1.7 +34.4 +.30 +1.2 +37.1 +.27 +0.7 +39.7 +.42 +0.3 +41.6 +.34 -0.2 +42.8 +.52 -0.6 +44.0 +.38 -1.1 +44.1 +.56 -1.2 +44.1 +.38 -1.1 +44.2 +.20 +1.4 +30.1 +1.07 -7.1 +48.0 -.01 +1.4 +11.0 +1.22 +3.3 +75.9 +1.21 +3.4 +55.2 +.63 -0.8 +45.9 +.06 +3.6 +32.7 -.05 +7.4 +20.1 -.06 +10.8 +25.0 -.05 +14.7 +39.6 -.01 +3.6 +12.2 +.31 -1.2 +44.1 -.07 +9.8 +23.3 +.75 -1.4 +45.1

Primecap Odyssey : AggGrwth r Growth r Stock r

10.86 8.81 7.50 10.58 9.65 8.19 9.60 10.15 10.79 8.54 9.34 9.79 11.46 11.80 11.58 11.65 11.12

-.04 +.29 +.03 +.08 +.39 +.29 +.37 +.39 +.34 +.33 +.34 +.36 +.15 +.27 +.30 +.35 +.36

+5.8 -13.8 +3.1 +3.0 -17.2 +6.7 +5.1 -1.0 +1.2 +5.8 +5.7 +2.4 +1.7 +0.2 -0.9 -2.0 -2.6

+40.7 +21.5 +44.3 +50.8 +12.9 +46.9 +61.2 +35.5 +36.8 +46.0 +49.4 +42.6 +41.3 +42.0 +42.3 +41.3 +41.0

8.60 +.11 +2.7 +58.2 25.68 +1.00 -12.3 +36.8 9.87 -.02 +6.1 +35.3

TCW Funds N: TotRtBdN p

10.20 -.02 +5.8 +34.1

TFS Funds: MktNeutral r

15.08 +.10 +0.2 +18.8

TIAA-CREF Funds: BdIdxInst BondInst EnLCGInst r EnLCVInst r EqIdxInst Gr&IncInst HighYldInst InfLkdBdInst IntlEqIInst IntlEqInst LgCGrInst LgCVl Inst MdCVlRet RealSecInst S&P500IInst

10.91 10.67 9.29 7.94 10.10 9.77 9.84 12.49 13.86 7.70 11.10 12.88 17.30 17.39 14.95

-.06 -.03 +.34 +.30 +.37 +.36 +.04 -.10 +.52 +.32 +.41 +.45 +.59 +.59 +.54

+6.3 +6.2 +7.4 +1.9 +4.5 +6.3 +5.4 +12.1 -16.4 -21.9 +7.1 -0.8 -0.7 -0.5 +5.8

NS +25.0 +58.2 +42.2 +51.4 +47.8 +46.7 +34.0 +12.9 +16.6 +48.8 +42.5 +52.8 +54.0 +49.9

Templeton Class A: TGlbTRA

12.39 +.26 -3.5 +32.4

Templeton Instit: ForEqS

16.38 +.42 -18.7 +11.7

Third Avenue Fds: IntlValInst r REValInst r ValueInst

14.25 +.48 -17.5 +13.1 23.14 +.78 -4.1 +45.6 42.61 +1.58 -14.8 +14.7

Thornburg Fds C: IntValuC t

22.53 +.55 -17.6 +14.6

Thornburg Fds: IntlValA p IncBuildA t IncBuildC p IntlValue I LtdMunA p LtTMuniI ValueI

24.02 17.62 17.62 24.56 14.61 14.61 29.08

+.59 +.37 +.38 +.60 -.04 -.04 +.86

-17.0 -3.6 -4.2 -16.7 +5.1 +5.5 -17.7

+17.2 +40.0 +37.2 +18.6 +16.6 +17.8 +12.1

Thrivent Fds A: LgCapStock MuniBd

21.95 +.83 -1.4 +31.2 11.75 -.08 +10.3 +22.4

Tocqueville Fds: Delafield Gold t

ITAdml n 14.21 ITCoAdmrl 10.17 LtdTrmAdm 11.16 LTGrAdml 10.54 LTsryAdml 13.61 LT Adml n 11.60 MCpAdml n 93.57 MorgAdm 58.76 MuHYAdml n 11.05 NJLTAd n 12.19 NYLTAd m 11.62 PrmCap r 65.94 PacifAdml 58.30 PALTAdm n 11.58 REITAdml r 90.16 STsryAdml 10.77 STBdAdml n 10.63 ShtTrmAdm 15.92 STFedAdm 10.84 STIGrAdm 10.73 SmlCapAdml n 35.10 TxMCap r 66.27 TxMGrInc r 59.66 TtlBdAdml n 11.08 TotStkAdm n 33.14 ValueAdml n 21.25 WellslAdm n 57.04 WelltnAdm n 55.90 WindsorAdm n 45.32 WdsrIIAdm 48.38 TaxMngdIntl rn 9.61 TaxMgdSC r 28.44

28.66 +1.05 -2.2 +58.7 65.01 +.46 -17.0 +59.7

SandsCpGY n 11.87 +.47 +13.3 +86.9 SandsCapGrI 16.48 +.65 +13.6 +89.4 SelGrowth 11.65 +.46 +13.0 +85.5

-.08 +8.4 +20.9 -.05 +7.2 +39.9 -.02 +2.8 +10.1 -.25 +16.5 +56.2 -.49 +29.2 +53.2 -.07 +10.7 +24.6 +3.26 -1.5 +63.2 +2.09 +3.6 +52.5 -.06 +11.9 +29.3 -.08 +10.6 +22.2 -.06 +9.1 +22.6 +2.15 -1.3 +40.5 +1.59 -10.4 +13.6 -.06 +9.5 +22.5 +3.78 +9.6 +110.6 -.01 +1.3 +7.2 -.01 +2.0 +12.2 -.01 +1.3 +4.8 -.02 +1.9 +9.7 -.01 +1.9 +17.4 +1.36 -0.2 +61.4 +2.36 +4.7 +50.1 +2.16 +5.8 +49.7 -.08 +6.3 +23.9 +1.20 +4.6 +52.3 +.77 +2.2 +44.4 +.42 +8.2 +44.9 +1.16 +4.4 +39.7 +1.51 -0.3 +42.6 +1.74 +4.8 +47.9 +.36 -16.8 +12.6 +1.07 +3.3 +60.6

Vanguard Fds: DivrEq n 21.29 CAIT n 11.57 CapOpp n 30.39 Convt n 12.25 DivAppInv n 22.54 DividendGro 15.97 Energy 53.83 EqInc n 22.62 Explorer n 74.82 GNMA n 11.08 GlobEq n 16.47 GroInc n 28.31 HYCorp n 5.78 HiDvdYld n 18.56 HlthCare n 135.05 InflaPro n 14.68 IntlExplr n 13.01 IntlGr 16.58 IntlVal n 26.24 ITI Grade 10.17 ITTsry n 11.76 LIFECon n 16.62 LIFEGro n 21.89 LIFEInc n 14.41 LIFEMod n 19.80 LTInGrade n 10.54 LTTsry n 13.61 MidCapGro 20.25 MATaxEx 10.77 Morgan n 18.94 MuHY n 11.05 MuInt n 14.21 MuLtd n 11.16 MuLong n 11.60 MuShrt n 15.92 OHLTTxE n 12.51 PrecMtlsMin r 16.01 PrmCpCore rn 13.80 Prmcp r 63.54 SelValu r 19.24 STAR n 19.45 STIGrade 10.73 STFed n 10.84 STTsry n 10.77 StratEq n 19.32 TgtRetInc 11.84 TgtRet2010 23.20 TgtRet2015 12.72 TgtRet2020 22.45 TgtRet2025 12.72 TgRet2030 21.70 TgtRet2035 12.99 TgtRe2040 21.30 TgtRet2050 n 21.20 TgtRe2045 n 13.37 USGro n 19.69 Wellsly n 23.54 Welltn n 32.36 Wndsr n 13.43 WndsII n 27.25

+.77 +2.9 -.07 +9.2 +1.01 -4.3 +.22 -4.9 +.72 +5.8 +.54 +8.1 +1.87 -16.9 +.78 +8.6 +2.74 -1.2 -.01 +5.3 +.58 -8.9 +1.05 +6.7 +.02 +6.3 +.62 +9.4 +3.78 +3.1 -.13 +12.2 +.39 -20.2 +.64 -14.7 +.90 -16.7 -.05 +7.1 -.08 +7.5 +.17 +2.1 +.58 -1.1 +.02 +3.5 +.36 +0.8 -.25 +16.4 -.49 +29.1 +.79 +4.3 -.07 +9.0 +.67 +3.4 -.06 +11.8 -.08 +8.3 -.02 +2.7 -.07 +10.6 -.01 +1.2 -.06 +9.7 +.59 -30.0 +.43 -1.6 +2.07 -1.4 +.71 +1.2 +.37 +1.4 -.01 +1.8 -.02 +1.8 -.01 +1.2 +.72 +0.3 +.07 +4.9 +.27 +3.5 +.21 +2.1 +.46 +1.2 +.30 +0.4 +.57 -0.4 +.38 -1.2 +.66 -1.4 +.66 -1.4 +.41 -1.4 +.75 +5.2 +.17 +8.1 +.67 +4.3 +.45 -0.4 +.98 +4.7

DevMkInPl nr 86.38 EmMkInPl nr 80.61 ExtMkt I n 102.83 MidCpIstPl n 101.95 SmCapInPl n 101.31 TotIntAdm nr 21.62 TotIntlInst nr 86.47 TotIntlIP nr 86.49 TotIntSig nr 25.94 500 n 122.66 Balanced n 22.69 DevMkt n 8.35 EMkt n 24.24 Extend n 41.63 Growth n 34.38 ITBond n 11.98 LTBond n 14.25 MidCap 20.61 REIT r 21.13 SmCap n 35.06 SmlCpGrow 22.63 SmlCapVal 15.76 STBond n 10.63 TotBond n 11.08 TotlIntl n 12.92 TotStk n 33.12 Value n 21.25

+3.26 -16.5 NS +2.52 -18.2 NS +3.64 -0.9 NS +3.55 -1.4 NS +3.92 -0.2 NS +.73 -17.2 NS +2.94 -17.1 NS +2.94 -17.1 NS +.89 -17.2 NS +4.45 +5.8 +49.7 +.43 +5.8 +41.4 +.31 -16.6 +12.8 +.76 -18.4 +24.8 +1.47 -1.1 +59.4 +1.21 +7.9 +56.9 -.09 +9.3 +36.0 -.39 +21.1 +55.5 +.72 -1.6 +62.4 +.89 +9.6 +109.8 +1.36 -0.4 +60.7 +.94 -0.3 +66.6 +.56 -0.4 +54.8 -.01 +1.9 +11.8 -.08 +6.2 +23.5 +.43 -17.2 +15.2 +1.19 +4.5 +51.8 +.77 +2.1 +43.9

Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 22.70 DevMktInst n 8.29 EmMktInst n 24.23 ExtIn n 41.66 FTAllWldI r 76.88 GrowthInstl 34.39 InfProtInst n 11.75 InstIdx n 121.89 InsPl n 121.90 InstTStIdx n 29.99 InstTStPlus 29.99 LTBdInst n 14.25 MidCapInstl n 20.67 REITInst r 13.96 STIGrInst 10.73 SmCpIn n 35.10 SmlCapGrI n 22.68 TBIst n 11.08 TSInst n 33.14 ValueInstl n 21.25

+.43 +5.9 +42.2 +.31 -16.6 NS +.75 -18.2 +25.4 +1.47 -0.9 +60.2 +2.69 -17.1 +16.2 +1.22 +8.1 +57.7 -.10 +12.4 +34.8 +4.43 +5.9 +50.2 +4.43 +5.9 +50.3 +1.08 +4.6 +52.5 +1.08 +4.6 +52.5 -.39 +21.3 +56.2 +.72 -1.4 +63.4 +.59 +9.7 +110.9 -.01 +2.0 +17.5 +1.36 -0.2 +61.5 +.94 -0.1 +67.4 -.08 +6.3 +24.1 +1.19 +4.6 +52.3 +.77 +2.2 +44.6

Vanguard Signal: BalancSgl n ExtMktSgl n 500Sgl n GroSig n ITBdSig n MidCapIdx n REITSig r STBdIdx n SmCapSig n TotalBdSgl n TotStkSgnl n ValueSig n

22.45 35.80 101.34 31.85 11.98 29.53 24.07 10.63 31.62 11.08 31.98 22.11

+.42 +1.27 +3.68 +1.13 -.09 +1.03 +1.01 -.01 +1.22 -.08 +1.15 +.80

AggrOpp n DivrStrat EqtyInc n Growth n Grow&Inc n Intl n MPLgTmGr n MPTradGrth n

9.79 10.04 8.55 8.97 10.09 8.31 21.05 22.24

+.34 +.06 +.31 +.34 +.35 +.25 +.54 +.45

DvsStkA

14.97 +.51 -1.8 +28.6

EmgMktI

9.12 +.27 -1.1 +62.2

Virtus Funds A: 4.79 +.01

WM B WM B

M

W

&R

A

m

AsAlModGr t 11.62 +.25 -3.5 +29.1

TA IDEX C: 11.64 +.18 -1.2 +29.6

Transamerica Ptrs: 8.90 +.32 +5.6 +49.1

W

Tweedy Browne: 22.53 +.43 -3.8 +40.1 m

USAA Group: CornstStr n Grwth n Gr&Inc n HYldInco n IncStk n Income n IntTerBd n Intl n PrecMM S&P Idx n S&P Rewrd ShtTBnd n TxEIT n TxELT n TxESh n

21.56 15.24 15.01 8.21 12.81 13.27 10.56 21.91 27.51 19.76 19.77 9.18 13.56 13.67 10.83

+.25 +.58 +.55 +.03 +.43 -.06 -.07 +.82 +.39 +.56 +.57 ... -.05 -.07 -.01

-5.2 +2.7 -0.7 +1.3 +3.7 +5.9 +4.5 -13.7 -18.6 NA NA +2.5 +9.5 +13.0 +3.6

+35.0 +41.1 +41.8 +57.6 +46.2 +32.7 +46.3 +26.8 +24.3 NA NA +16.4 +25.8 +30.8 +12.5

VALIC : MidCapIdx StockIndex

19.76 +.64 -0.5 +62.5 24.80 +.90 +5.6 +49.3

W m

W

A

A

W

A

A

W

A

C

W

A M M

W

A

Van Eck Funds: 39.67 +1.28 -22.4 +13.9

Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 22.70 CAITAdm n 11.57 CALTAdm 11.76 CpOpAdl n 70.21 EM Adm nr 31.85 Energy n 101.07 EqIncAdml 47.42 EuropAdml 50.62 ExplAdml 69.65 ExntdAdm n 41.67 500Adml n 122.68 GNMA Adm n 11.08 GroIncAdm 46.24 GrwthAdml n 34.39 HlthCare n 56.99 HiYldCp n 5.78 InflProAd n 28.85 ITBondAdml 11.98 ITsryAdml n 11.76 IntlGrAdml 52.77

+.43 +5.9 -.07 +9.3 -.07 +11.6 +2.33 -4.3 +.99 -18.3 +3.52 -16.9 +1.63 +8.7 +2.21 -19.5 +2.55 -1.1 +1.48 -0.9 +4.45 +5.9 -.01 +5.4 +1.71 +6.8 +1.22 +8.1 +1.60 +3.2 +.02 +6.4 -.24 +12.4 -.09 +9.4 -.08 +7.6 +2.05 -14.6

+42.0 +22.7 +26.1 +34.0 +25.2 +14.6 +59.5 +13.3 +60.5 +60.1 +50.2 +22.1 +49.1 +57.6 +53.2 +46.8 +34.7 +36.4 +24.7 +25.1

NA NA NA NA +46.7 +18.2 +34.4 +31.3

Virtus Funds:

Transamerica C:

GblValue

NA NA NA NA +3.1 -13.3 -1.3 +0.1

Victory Funds:

AsAlModGr p 11.67 +.25 -2.9 +31.6

InstStkIdx p

+5.9 +42.0 -1.0 +60.1 +5.9 +50.2 +8.1 +57.6 +9.4 +36.4 -1.4 +63.2 +9.7 +110.7 +2.0 +12.2 -0.2 +61.3 +6.3 +24.0 +4.6 +52.3 +2.2 +44.4

Vantagepoint Fds:

Transamerica A:

AsAlMod t

+49.2 +22.4 +33.7 +37.9 +46.6 +47.3 +14.4 +59.1 +59.7 +21.7 +34.5 +48.6 +46.3 +57.7 +53.0 +34.2 +22.8 +24.6 +9.7 +39.4 +24.3 +31.0 +38.0 +27.0 +35.4 +55.7 +52.7 +63.7 +21.2 +51.9 +29.0 +20.6 +9.9 +24.3 +4.6 +21.9 +18.4 +42.5 +40.1 +55.1 +36.7 +17.0 +9.3 +6.9 +59.6 +31.1 +35.8 +36.4 +37.2 +38.3 +39.1 +39.8 +39.6 +39.5 +39.6 +45.4 +44.6 +39.4 +42.3 +47.5

Vanguard Idx Fds:

MulSStA p

Touchstone Family:

GlHardA

17.68 +1.15 +3.3 +76.4 15.78 +.75 -1.7 +49.0 14.70 +.41 +1.3 +44.9

Principal Inv: BdMtgInstl DivIntlInst HighYldA p HiYld In Intl I Inst LgCGr2In LgLGI In LgCV3 In LgCV1 In LgGrIn LgCpIndxI LgCValIn LT2010In LfTm2020In LT2030In LT2040In LfTm2050I

20.02 +.69 -0.8 +51.3

TCW Funds: EmMktInc SmlCapGr TotlRetBdI

DiverIntl n 25.85 DiversIntK r 25.83 DivStkO n 15.55 DivGrowK 27.40 DivGth n 27.39 Emerg Asia r 25.50 EmrgMkt n 20.36 EqutInc n 42.98 EQII n 18.24 EqIncK 42.97 Export n 22.03 FidelFd 33.41 FltRateHi r 9.72 FocHiInco re 9.07 FourInOne n 26.90 GNMA n 11.92 GovtInc n 10.88 GroCo n 89.58 GroInc 19.26 GrowCoF 89.55 GrowthCoK 89.55 GrStrat nr 19.19 HighInc rn 8.84 Indepndnce n 23.50 InProBnd 13.29 IntBd n 11.00 IntGov 11.04 IntmMuni n 10.58 IntlDisc n 28.01 InvGrBd n 11.88 InvGB n 7.86 LgCapVal n 10.46 LatAm n 47.25 LevCoStock 27.22 LowPr rn 37.29 LowPriStkK r 37.29 Magellan n 67.55 MagellanK 67.48 MA Muni n 12.58 MegaCpStk n 10.78 MidCap nx 27.56 MidCapK rx 27.55 MuniInc n 13.34 NewMkt nr 16.43 NewMill n 30.44 NY Mun n 13.53 OTC 56.51 OTC K 56.90 100Index 9.44 Ovrsea n 27.44 Puritan 18.66 PuritanK 18.66 RealEInc r 10.85 RealEst n 30.52 SrAllSecEqF 11.97 SCmdtyStrt n 8.20 SCmdtyStrF n 8.22 SrsEmrgMkt 14.72 SrEmgMktF 14.76 SrsIntGrw 10.48 SerIntlGrF 10.51 SrsIntSmCp 11.12 SrsIntVal 7.90 SerIntlValF 7.92 SrsInvGrdF 11.88 ShtIntMu n 10.86 STBondF 8.53 STBF n 8.53 SmCapDisc ne 20.88 SmCpGrth r 15.67 SmCapOpp 10.71 SmallCapS nre 16.71 SmCapValu r 14.67 StkSlcACap n 25.89 StkSelSmCap 18.56 StratDivInc 11.61 StratInc n 10.98 TaxFreeB r 11.50 TotalBond n 11.10 Trend n 72.67 USBdIdxF 11.89 USBI n 11.89 Utility n 18.01 Value n 66.95 Wrldwde n 17.99

55.43 +.87 +3.0 +28.6 53.46 +1.73 +1.2 +34.1

Sun Capital Adv:

1 yr 3 yr NAV Chg %rt %rt

M

W

A m

W M

W W

A

W

mB

W

Y

m

N


G5

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

Batteries Continued from G1 Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that the phrase “ihatebatterylow” has become a big hit on Facebook and Twitter. Driven by this consumer frustration as well as by a recent jolt of federal funding for improved batteries, university labs, small startups and corporate research divisions are all trying to make breakthroughs that will give us more room to roam away from our alternating-current tethers. Though most of these designs haven’t hit the consumer market yet, the past few years have seen a surge of new configurations and chemistry that may solve some of our low-battery woes, said Esther Takeuchi, a professor of advanced power systems at the State University of New York at Buffalo. “With the combination of new materials, new design concepts, and new production and manufacturing methodologies, I believe we will get there,” she said. Takeuchi said the current gold standard for batteries is lithium-ion, which was commercialized more than 20 years ago and is now commonly found in computers, camcorders and cellphones. Some researchers are trying to pack more power into existing lithium-ion cells; others are looking to incorporate such elements as sulfur, zinc, magnesium and even air into new types of batteries. But while the race is on to make this quantum leap, some observers caution that improvements will take longer than the big jumps in memory and speed that have occurred in the computer industry roughly every 18 months. “If you want to talk about a tenfold improvement, it might be a while,” said John Gartner, senior research analyst at Pike Research in Boulder, Colo. “But we are going to see consistent improvements across the board.”

The challenges Batteries work by converting a chemical reaction into electrical energy. Electrons form a circuit by flowing from one electrode — a positively charged cathode — to another one — a negatively charged anode — through an electrolyte, which can be either liquid or solid. The voltage difference between the two electrodes produces an electrical current. Italian physicist Alessandro Volta make the first one in 1800 by stacking layers of zinc, cloth and silver. In the 20th century, heavy but long-lasting lead-acid batteries were developed for vehicles, while portable yet disposable alkaline batteries were commercialized for flashlights, smoke detectors and almost everything else. Improvements to rechargeable lithium-ion batteries appear to have the most promise, at least right now. These batteries, used in most consumer electronics, including smartphones and iPads, have a limited lifespan and charge capacity. But researchers say they can be made tremendously more efficient and long-lasting. Researchers at the University of Texas developed the first lithium-ion rechargeable battery in the early 1980s.

And while today’s lithium-ion batteries last longer than older nickel-metal-hydride rechargeables, some experts say there’s plenty of room for improvement. “Lithium-ion is only at the halfway point of what’s theoretically possible,” said Dane Boysen, director of the Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy battery program, which has awarded $36 million to 10 projects since 2010. One of the grantees, Envia Systems of Newark, Calif., said in February that it could now more than double the power stored in its rechargeable lithium-ion battery, thanks to its new manganese-based cathode and silicon-carbon anode. The claim was verified by the Naval Surface Warfare Center in Crane, Ind., a federal lab that evaluates engineering and electronics projects for the Pentagon. General Motors has an agreement with Envia to use its new advanced lithium-ion battery for the Chevy Volt in the next two to three years. Boysen says the technology could make its way further into the consumer market relatively quickly, allowing laptops to run for 12 hours straight instead of six hours as is common now, for example. Meanwhile, Pellion Technologies, started by scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is building a manganese-based battery. Pellion claims it will have twice the energy of existing lithiumion batteries, for both small consumer products and electric cars. Toyota researchers in Michigan say they are developing a magnesium battery that can run 250 to 300 miles, twice the range of today’s batteries. Magnesium is considered superior to lithium as an anode because it can store more of a charge, lasts longer and doesn’t build up dendrites, tiny chemical deposits that can be a safety problem. The obstacle facing developers is finding the right kind of cathode and electrolyte to use with magnesium. An Israeli scientist put together the first rechargeable magnesium-sulfur battery in 2000, but it didn’t hold much of a charge. Pellion has used high-powered computers to screen 10,000 substances to see if they would work together with magnesium. Pellion officials said recently that they have narrowed it down to a few dozen candidates, while Toyota reported in August that it is using magnesium, sulfur and a special electrolyte. Then there are lithiumair batteries, which use carbon for their cathodes instead of metal oxides. Carbon is lighter and reacts with oxygen in the air to produce an electrical current. Although such a battery promises a 1,000mile range for electric cars, engineers haven’t yet figured out how to make it recharge properly, according to New Scientist magazine.

Crux Continued from G1 Later, he worked on adjustments to a light version of the beer. He tried slightly different ingredients, changed brewing times and raised or lowered brewing temperatures. “Methodical is the word,” Sidor recalled. “It was very scientific, very minute. It was kind of fearful brewing. You were afraid of changing the beer and afraid of making mistakes.” But toward the end of his time with Olympia, after Pabst Brewing Co. had acquired it, Sidor had more freedom. “I was doing flavored beer,” he said. “I was doing some craft-type beers. I had a lot of (research-and-development) facilities open to me. We released an amber beer. We released a red beer. … We tried flavored high-alcohol beers.” After nearly 25 years at Olympia, Sidor left and ran a winery in Yakima, Wash., with his wife, Lisa. But he picked up a few tricks. When he moved to Bend in 2004 and began as Deschutes Brewery’s brewmaster, he brought with him newly acquired knowledge on barrel aging and other wine-making techniques. The Deschutes job turned out to be more managerial than the title suggests. There was not much brewing involved. He established methods to improve consistency. He also implemented a method for coming up with new kinds of beer. He sought suggestions for new beers, and had brewers make small batches at the downtown Bend pub. Then he had servers pass out questionnaires to customers. The comments helped Deschutes decide to scale up production or ditch the new recipe — but so did the sales and volume figures. As Paul Arney, a former assistant brewmaster at Deschutes, prepares to open his brewery west of Bend, The Ale Apothecary, he said he

Photos by Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

The bar at the Crux Fermentation Project brewery in Bend features reclaimed wood.

“Methodical is the word. It was very scientific, very minute. It was kind of fearful brewing. You were afraid of changing the beer and afraid of making mistakes.” — Larry Sidor, referencing working at Olympia Brewing Co. in the 1970s Larry Sidor, a partner on the Crux Fermentation Project in Bend, digs through a pile of stainless steel parts while putting together tanks at the soon-to-be opened brewery.

benefited from the experimentation Sidor encouraged. Devising radical new ways to make better beer might appear abstract. Sidor disagrees. “To me,” he said, “that’s brewing.” In the coming days, Sidor will jump back into a uniform of some kind and start making beer once again. But he won’t make much. When Crux’s production peaks in a few years, it will turn out 9,000 barrels annually. Sidor will brew two beers,

his India pale ale and a dark Belgian ale, throughout the year. “We have to have an IPA,” he said. “… My IPA is going to be very hop-forward, not bitter. You won’t have to have a tongue scraper to drink it.” The other beers Sidor will rotate throughout the year. The hefeweizen will be hoppy, while the dark Belgian ale and the saison will be spicy. A märzen lager will replicate the style popular at Germany’s Oktoberfest celebration. Sidor’s pilsner won’t pack

much alcohol. “We need to have a lighter beer,” he said. “We’re a very active community.” The three open-air fermenters at Crux will allow for additional aromas and flavors to develop inside all the brews except the India pale ale, which will go in nine fully contained, or closed, fermenters. It’s not as if Sidor has been staying up late at night to think up what to brew. He has known all along. “They’re my favorites,” Sidor said. “Even though I don’t brew for myself, I brew for other people. It’s a starting spot.” — Reporter: 541-633-2117, jnovet@bendbulletin.com

Plan for streamlined poultry inspection raises squawks By Kim Geiger Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — As part of President Barack Obama’s push to streamline regulations on businesses, the U.S. Department of Agriculture plans to let chicken slaughterhouses run production lines faster and with fewer federal inspectors, angering food safety advocates and poultry plant workers. Under the proposal, production lines would be allowed to move 25 percent faster, while the government would cut by as much as 75 percent the number of line inspectors eyeing chicken bodies for defects before the carcasses are packaged for consumption. The quicker conveyor belts also raise the prospects that plant workers who hang carcasses, clean, trim and cut chickens at rapid speeds will be prone to more injuries as the pace is ratcheted up, labor groups said.

The USDA estimated that the proposal would eliminate as many as 800 inspector positions and save the federal government $90 million over three years. The department closed public comments on its proposed rules last week and could adopt them or revised ones by this fall. The proposed rules mark a major policy shift. They are based on a 13-year pilot program that tested whether public safety would be improved by giving plant employees a bigger role — and federal inspectors a lesser one — in sorting good chickens from bad. “We would be turning over what are essentially quality sorting jobs to people employed by the company,” said Dr. Elisabeth Hagen, under-

secretary for food safety. “And that’s an appropriate transfer of responsibility.” But Tony Corbo, at the health advocacy group Food and Water Watch, calls it “a privatization of poultry inspection” because plant employees would be responsible for spotting and removing defective chickens. Consumer advocates said the rising rates of salmonella infection in recent years should give pause to any plans to cut the number of federal inspectors at poultry plants. The dispute highlights the competing interests facing the Obama administration as pressure for fiscal austerity and pro-business policies collide with concerns about the role of government in protect-

ing public health and worker safety. “It’s this perfect storm that allows USDA to lax up on the amount of scrutiny they give these plants,” said Amanda Hitt, director of the Food Integrity Campaign for the Government Accountability Project, a watchdog group. “It’s beyond safety. It’s an integrity issue.” The National Chicken Council, which represents the $45-billion-a-year poultry industry, said the proposal would modernize an outdated inspection system. In testing its relaxed rules at 20 chicken slaughterhouses and five turkey plants, the USDA found little difference with conventional plants in the instances of salmonella and other pathogens.

7:30 AM - 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT. 541-382-4171 541-548-7707

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EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

Northwest stocks Name AlaskAir s Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeBcp CascdeCp ColSprtw Costco CraftBrew FLIR Sys HewlettP HmFedID Intel Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDU Res MentorGr Microsoft

Div PE ... 1.16 .04 .44 1.76 ... 1.40f .88 1.10f ... .28 .53f .22 .90f .20f .46 ... ... .67 ... .80

15 16 ... 38 12 ... 9 18 25 14 15 8 ... 11 7 23 7 ... 21 14 11

YTD Last Chg %Chg 34.73 26.15 7.56 20.17 69.94 5.79 45.42 50.09 88.74 7.50 21.15 22.31 9.40 26.41 7.28 21.57 4.67 9.57 22.39 14.33 29.65

+.93 +.18 +.14 -.26 -.01 +.22 +.81 +1.05 +.61 ... -.19 +.25 +.24 +.47 +.13 -.17 +.10 +.20 +.15 +.09 +.42

-7.5 +1.6 +36.0 +1.1 -4.6 +32.2 -3.7 +7.6 +6.5 +24.6 -15.6 -13.4 -9.6 +8.9 -5.3 -10.9 -21.4 +18.6 +4.3 +5.7 +14.2

Name

Div PE

NikeB Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar PlanarSy PlumCrk PrecCastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin StancrpFn Starbucks TriQuint Umpqua US Bancrp WashFed WellsFargo WstCstBcp Weyerhsr

1.44 1.08 1.78 ... .80f ... 1.68 .12 .70f .75f 1.56 .89f .68 ... .36f .78f .32 .88 ... .60

NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver

Price (troy oz.) $1594.00 $1590.10 $28.461

641 NW Fir Redmond

www.denfeldpaints.com

Market recap YTD Last Chg %Chg

23 108.64 +1.28 +12.7 15 48.77 +1.11 -1.9 20 47.13 +.41 -1.7 15 4.47 +.04 -1.5 12 38.62 +.84 +3.1 ... 1.66 -.01 -13.1 33 37.36 +.40 +2.2 19 163.98 -.10 -.5 11 18.22 -.04 -13.4 8 25.12 -.29 -40.6 29 131.42 +1.35 +47.2 11 35.17 +.16 -4.3 31 53.59 +.15 +16.5 24 5.44 +.14 +11.7 16 12.47 +.21 +.6 12 30.10 +.52 +11.3 13 15.81 +.36 +13.0 11 31.43 +.25 +14.0 12 18.93 +.13 +21.3 31 20.45 +.25 +9.5

Precious metals Metal

2121 NE Division Bend

Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

NYSE

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

Last Chg

BkofAm S&P500ETF SprintNex GenElec NokiaCp

2276543 7.56 +.14 1235919 133.10 +1.05 835018 2.98 +.24 828778 19.20 +.20 770671 3.02 +.19

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

MolinaHlth Navistar TempurP Quiksilvr Yelp n

22.46 28.36 25.54 2.74 19.64

Chg %Chg +4.69 +4.25 +3.15 +.30 +2.12

+26.4 +17.6 +14.1 +12.3 +12.1

Losers ($2 or more)

Amex

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name

Name

CheniereEn NwGold g GoldStr g ImmunoCll NovaGld g

$1590.00 $1586.60 $28.519

Vol (00)

Last Chg

48141 12.57 -.10 25915 10.06 +.28 24131 1.23 +.01 23734 3.26 -.44 23178 5.99 -.01

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

DocuSec SynthBiol eUnits2yr OrientPap AdcareHlt

3.74 +.44 +13.3 2.05 +.22 +11.7 11.70 +1.20 +11.4 2.54 +.24 +10.4 3.56 +.24 +7.2

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Last

Chg %Chg

Name

Last

iPBetaEgy ETLg1mVix ETLg2mVix PrUVxST rs PSSPEmM

37.20 45.09 59.14 15.41 17.88

-6.83 -7.66 -7.49 -1.77 -1.95

TelInstEl ExtorreG g ImmunoCll Compx AdmRsc

4.44 -.96 2.64 -.36 3.26 -.44 10.19 -1.31 29.50 -2.21

Diary Pvs Day

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Nasdaq

Most Active ($1 or more)

Name

-15.5 -14.5 -11.2 -10.3 -9.8

Indexes

Microsoft PwShs QQQ Facebook n Cisco Intel

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

414134 382641 375773 294161 263987

Last Chg 29.65 62.87 27.10 16.73 26.41

+.42 +.60 +.79 +.15 +.47

Gainers ($2 or more) Name

Last

OptCable Francesc n ChinaTInfo CalAmp Rntrak

3.80 +.88 +30.1 27.57 +5.26 +23.6 5.35 +.83 +18.4 6.81 +.97 +16.6 18.29 +2.59 +16.5

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg -17.8 -12.0 -11.9 -11.4 -7.0

Name

Last

NPS Phm ProgrsSoft JksvlBcFl CrescntFn KiOR n

7.10 -.96 -11.9 18.02 -2.27 -11.2 2.00 -.25 -11.1 5.18 -.61 -10.5 6.82 -.76 -10.0

Diary 2,133 894 99 3,126 75 35

Vol (00)

Chg %Chg

Diary 265 183 44 492 5 9

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

1,635 838 119 2,592 37 33

52-Week High Low 13,338.66 10,404.49 5,627.85 3,950.66 477.53 381.99 8,496.42 6,414.89 2,498.89 1,941.99 3,134.17 2,298.89 1,422.38 1,074.77 14,951.57 11,208.42 860.37 601.71

Name Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Last

Net Chg

%Chg

YTD %Chg

52-wk %Chg

12,554.20 5,062.05 478.48 7,553.77 2,262.89 2,858.42 1,325.66 13,878.13 769.19

+93.24 +53.13 +1.73 +33.94 +9.78 +27.40 +10.67 +115.81 +8.85

+.75 +1.06 +.36 +.45 +.43 +.97 +.81 +.84 +1.16

+2.76 +.84 +2.97 +1.03 -.68 +9.72 +5.41 +5.22 +3.82

+5.04 +.03 +12.89 -5.77 -2.43 +8.12 +4.30 +3.12 -1.33

World markets

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed yesterday. Market Close % Change

Key currency exchange rates Friday compared with late Thursday in New York. Dollar vs: Exchange Rate Pvs Day

Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt Hong Kong Mexico Milan New Zealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich

Australia Dollar Britain Pound Canada Dollar Chile Peso China Yuan Euro Euro Hong Kong Dollar Japan Yen Mexico Peso Russia Ruble So. Korea Won Sweden Krona Switzerlnd Franc Taiwan Dollar

291.73 2,099.84 3,051.69 5,435.08 6,130.82 18,502.34 37,319.58 13,445.46 3,449.47 8,459.26 1,835.64 2,737.89 4,111.15 5,471.03

-.40 -.22 -.63 -.23 -.22 -.94 +.19 -.74 -.70 -2.09 -.67 -.77 -1.10 -.10

t t t t t t s t t t t t t t

.9904 1.5462 .9715 .001992 .1569 1.2507 .1289 .012581 .071651 .0307 .000853 .1402 1.0414 .0334

.9946 1.5553 .9759 .001992 .1571 1.2601 .1289 .012551 .071593 .0309 .000859 .1405 1.0492 .0336


G6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012

S D High-tech transmission still needs maintenance green and darkens with age to brown.

By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service

I have a 2007 Ford Freestyle SEL AWD I love reading your Q: with a continuously vari- Q: column and trying to able transmission, or CVT. troubleshoot odd problems.

Ford via McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Ford’s iconic Mustang pony car returns for 2013 with some tweaks and upgrades to its 2010 redesign.

I don’t know much about the CVT other than it has no traditional gears and it is supposed to get better mileage. My question relates to maintenance. Does the CVT fluid ever need to be drained and new fluid added? How about the CVT filter? I am getting different opinions about the transmission’s care and feeding. Some say maintenance is not needed, but that concerns me, given the complexity and cost of the transmission. I know you have the right answers. Your CVT uses two variators, or variable-diameter pulleys, and a chain to provide an infinite number of drive ratios instead of the four or five fixed ratios found in a typical automatic transmission. This allows the engine to run at its most efficient speed for a variety of driving conditions, without power interruptions from shifts, improving fuel economy. Sophisticated electronic controls direct hydraulic pressure to adjust the variators and a single planetary gear set provides reverse gear. Ford recommends renewing the special CVT fluid, called Motorcraft Continuously Variable Chain Type Transmission Fluid, every 60,000 miles along with the high-pressure case filter. This filter is located within a small housing attached to the outside of the transmission, supplementing another filter in the oil pan; there’s no interval mentioned for the latter. A drain plug allows five quarts of fluid to be drained. Another five are captive within the torque converter and various passages. Checking or adjusting fluid level must be done at a specified temperature as the CVT fluid expands differently than conventional fluid — 194F to check and 114F to adjust, idling in park. Fluid color is blue-

A:

Mustang reveals tweaks for 2013 By G. Chambers Williams III McClatchy-Tribune News Service

The iconic pony car returns for 2013 with some cool tweaks and upgrades, soldiering on as one of the mostpopular Ford models ever. Last redesigned for 2010, the Mustang doesn’t get a complete makeover for the new model year, but there are some interesting changes. Among them are optional heated outside mirrors that project the famous pony emblem on the ground beside the car. It comes on automatically when the button REVIEW unlock is pushed on the remote. At the front of the car, there are new signature lamps in the grille, LED fog lights on the GT models, LED taillights for all models, and — another cool touch — a center-mounted rear stop lamp that changes from red to white when the transmission is shifted into “reverse,” for use as a backup light. Rocker panels are now body-color, and at the rear is a black panel connecting the taillights. The sequential turn signal feature has been retained, of course, but there is a smoked look to the taillights. Once again, there are Mustang V-6 models in coupe and convertible styles, and V-8 powered GT models in both body styles, as well. Also returning is the Boss 302 that was introduced for 2012. The V-6 models get new 17-inch painted wheels. Both V-6 and GT models can be equipped with Recaro bolstered bucket seats in either cloth or leather. Those are the same seats already featured on the 2012 Shelby GT500 and Boss 302 models. They also come with integrated head restraints that are designed to accommodate a driver and front passenger who are also wearing helmets. The GT models get a modest bump in power — they’ll now have 420 horsepower, up from 412 for the 2012 GT, thanks to the incorporation of some of the technology from the Boss 302’s 444-horsepower, 5.0-liter V-8. With the optional SelectShift six-speed automatic, you’ll be able to push the engine all the way to redline while using the manual-shift feature, rather than have the transmission get scared and shift at a lower engine speed on its own. There’s also a new GT Track Package available that’s offered only with the six-speed manual gearbox and 3.73 axle. It includes an auxiliary engine cooler, upgraded radiator, performance brake pads and the Torsen differential also used on the Boss 302. This package has everything that’s included in the 2012 Brembo Brake Package, including 14-inch vented front discs, unique 19-inch alloy wheels and summer performance tires, Ford says. Even without the Track Package, the GT models —

2013 Ford Mustang Base price: $22,200 As tested: $28,440 Type: Two-door coupe or convertible Engine: V-6 or V-8 Mileage: 15-19 mpg city, 25-31 mpg highway, depending on model and engine type

manual or automatic — will be offered with the Brembo Brake Package. And the V-6 Performance Package will be available on automatic models for the first time. Also new for 2013 will be Hill Start Assist, available on all models with a manual transmission. It’s designed to hold the car on a hill for up to two seconds when the driver’s foot comes off the brake, to allow time to start the car moving forward without having it roll backward. I’ve seen this feature on SUVs in recent years, but it’s not usually found on cars. The new front end has a more aggressive look. On the GT models, there are heat extractors on the hood to move hot air out of the engine compartment. A whole new lineup of wheels is being offered. They range from the standard 17inch painted wheels on the V-6 models to the optional 19-inch wheels available on the GT and in the V-6 Performance Package. Besides the painted finish, there is also a machined-aluminum finish offered on the 17-inch wheels. Standard on the GT and

premium GT are 18-inch, five-spoke painted-aluminum wheels. Optional on the GT are 19-inch machined wheels with a gloss-black finish for a “more sinister look,” Ford says. With the Brembo and Track packages, you’ll get 10-spoke, 19-inch dark stainless-painted aluminum wheels. An optional dash message center has a 4.2-inch LCD screen and comes with “Track Apps,” showing such data as g-forces, acceleration times both for zero-60 mph and the quarter mile, and braking times. There is a cool “countdown start” feature that looks like the start lights at a dragstrip. The steering system offers three selectable settings — standard, comfort and sport — which can be set through the message center. Ford says the sport mode “provides the most road force felt through the steering wheel and requires the highest level of steering effort, allowing the driver to be more in tune with how the vehicle reacts to the road.” That’s the setting you would use on the track, of course, but also on fun twisty roads. The comfort mode gives the driver the least amount of feedback from the road, and also requires the least amount of steering effort. This would be best for city driving and parking lots. The standard mode is intended to be a balance between the comfort and sport settings. Inside, the new Mustangs offer new Shaker audio systems that are designed to produce sound similar to that of a live performance,

Ford says. There are two: the Shaker, with 370 watts and eight speakers, and the Shaker Pro, with 550 watts and nine speakers. On models with Ford’s voice-controlled SYNC system, there is AppLink, a software program that allows for voice control of apps such as iHeartRadio and Pandora on smartphones connected to SYNC. The Boss 302 models for 2013 ($42,200 plus options) come with a new hockeystick side graphic. My tester was the V-6 Premium coupe with a “Race Red” exterior and charcoal black interior. Base price for this model is $26,200. Mine came with the 3.7-liter V-6 engine, rated at 305 horsepower and 280 foot-pounds of torque. The V-6 has pretty decent fuel economy. EPA estimates are 19 mpg city/31 highway for the automatic coupe I tested; with the convertible, the numbers are 19/30. With the manual gearbox, the estimates are 1 9/29 for the coupe and convertible. For the GT models, ratings are 18 city/25 highway with the automatic; 1 5/26 with the manual.

Mine is with my daughter’s 2003 Oldsmobile Alero. Sometimes when she starts the car in the morning, there is no power to any dashboard lights or gauges, radio, or heater blower and defroster. After a few minutes, sometimes 10 or 20, everything comes back on. I have never observed the problem, so I tried pulling every relay and fuse that I could find in both the driver’s-side fuse box and the under-hood fuse box one at a time, but none of them would disable all of the functions mentioned above. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated. My daughter is going to school 300 miles away, so I don’t get a chance to work on the car very often. I did my best to scour the power distribution diagrams for the Alero, looking for a common element but ended up with a bunch of possibly unnoticed additional symptoms for your daughter to check for. As great as her description was, the complexity of the Alero’s electrical system calls for a more detailed check of what does and doesn’t work at the time the gremlins play their trick. As time-consuming as this may be, she should check stoplights, hazard lights, the complete function of the heating and ventilation controls, headlight dimming, and various body system functions, such as windows, door locks, mirrors — basically, everything she can think of. With a comprehensive list of what’s working and what isn’t, it should be possible to pin down the cause to a particular connector, junction bar or conductor within the right or left side instrument panel or underhood fuse box. It sounds odd, but knowing what does work is just as helpful as what doesn’t.

A:

— Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Arts & Entertainment Every Friday

NEW 2012 CHRYSLER 200

$17,995* MSRP $22,775, Rebate $3000, Discount $1780. Vin:CN125492, Stk# C11051

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$18,995* MSRP $22,500, Rebate $1500, Discount $2005. Vin:CD604115, Stk# J12037

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541-749-4025 www.smolichmotors.com All sale prices after any dealer discounts, factory rebates & applicable incentives. Terms vary. See dealer for details. Limited stock on hand. Manufactures rebates and incentives subject to change. Art for illustration purposes only. Subject to prior sale. Not responsible for typos. Expires 6/10/12. Chrysler and Jeep are registered trademarks of DaimlerChrysler Corporation.


PLU

S U N D AY, J U N E 1 0 , 2 0 1 2

FUNNY

S

INNER D N I W WITH ! THEO10R U A N A S E E PA G

MOVING

JAW-D∏OPPING Summer’s

BEST BOOKS

CASTLE ’S NATHAN FILLION

Reveals

HIS FAVORITE READS

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


PARADE

SINGER SPOTLIGHT

Got a question? Email us at personality@parade.com

WALTER SCOTT ASKS …

Larry Hagman Find out who inspired the character of J. R. at Parade.com /hagman

The 80-year-old actor is back to his scheming ways as oilman J. R. Ewing on Dallas, premiering June 13 (TNT, 9 p.m. ET). What can we expect from the new Dallas? Beauty, for one thing.

All the new kids are gorgeous, since no one wants just us old farts talking about our exploits 30 years ago. And it’s fast! More happens in one episode than used to happen in five. If you go get a beer, you’re going to miss a whole lot. You became a vegan after your cancer diagnosis last year. As a Texan, do you miss meat? After the first couple of months, I

didn’t miss anything. I’ve lost 30 pounds; I feel better and have more energy. I’m doing good. Working at 80 is kind of nice. You once said you weren’t afraid of death. True? Yeah, I don’t worry about it. It’s not a black void out there. I had a liver transplant 16 years ago and saw the white light, saw that we’re all joined together. You don’t forget that feeling of peace and love. Will J. R. get shot again? I hope not! If I hold out for more money this time, they might kill me off. Email your questions to Walter Scott at Parade.com/contact. Letters to Walter Scott can be sent to P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10163-5001.

Q: Does America’s Got Talent judge Howard Stern have any hidden talents? —L. Mitchell,

Mom Caves (Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. ET).

San Diego

A: “He can hold a tune

and play the guitar, but he’s not up to par with the acts we’ve seen on the show,” says his wife, Beth. “Being a great husband is the talent I’m most thankful for!” The 39-year-old is putting her own talents to good use as host of HGTV’s

P Howard and Beth Stern

helping contestants on season two (ABC, Sundays, 9 p.m. ET). “My door is always open.” Q: Who should play Judy Garland in a biopic? —Katie Jay, Flint Hill, Miss.

A: The most recent P Trainer Chris Powell

Q: Do the Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition contestants get any help after the show ends? —Wally, Torrance, Calif.

A: They have con-

tinued support from trainer Chris Powell. “Maintenance is the true challenge, and the rubber really meets the road after the show,” says Powell, who is now

attempt to bring Garland’s life story to the big screen has Anne Hathaway attached, but there are several stars who might be able to fill her ruby slippers. Katharine McPhee wowed as a Broadway hopeful on NBC’s Smash, Lily Collins (Mirror Mirror) has music in her genes (her dad is Phil

Collins), and don’t count out New Girl ’s Zooey Deschanel, who sings as one-half of the duo She & Him. Vote for your pick at Parade.com/judy. P Judy Garland

JOSH TURNER The country singer, 34, has a new album, Punching Bag, in stores June 12.

What’s the story behind the album’s title? I had one of those days when nothing was going right, and I felt like a punching bag. It’s about taking those punches and moving forward. You’ve been called “a country Barry White.” Do you agree? I have a low voice, and it really shines when I sing a love song. I sing from the heart, and I think Barry White did the same thing. What did you think of American Idol Scotty McCreery’s take on “Your Man” last year? He was great. I couldn’t have asked for a better protégé to sing my music in front of millions of people.

Scan to download Turner’s single “Time Is Love” and enter for a chance to see him in concert in New York!

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: MARK SELIGER/TNT; ROYCE DEGRIE/GETTY IMAGES; CINEMAPHOTO/CORBIS; CRAIG SJODIN/ABC; JERRITT CLARK/WIREIMAGE. Download: “Time Is Love” single limited to the first 20K people. Josh Turner New York Flyaway Sweepstakes: NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. A PURCHASE WILL NOT ENHANCE YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING. Open & offered only to legal residents of the 50 U.S./D.C., 18+ (19+ for AL & NE) at time of entry. Void in P.R. & where prohibited. To enter: Between 12:00:01 A.M. PT on 6/09/12 and 11:59:59 P.M. PT on 6/18/12, log on to joshturnerparade.com and follow the instructions. Subject to official rules at joshturnerparade.com. Sponsor: UMG Nashville, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc. (“UMG Nashville”) at 401 Commerce Street, Suite 1100, Nashville, TN 37219.

Walter Scott,s

2 • June 10, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


A

N E W

A B C

F A M I LY

O R I G I N A L

S E R I E S

© ABC Family

Sometimes life raises the barre.

From Executive Producer Amy Sherman-Palladino, the creator of Gilmore Girls

series premiere june 11 abcfamily.com

mondays at 9/8c ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


What to read, see, and do this week

For more, go to Parade.com/picks

FOLK HEROINES

TOM CRUISE, ROCK STAR? He’s lip-synched to Bob Seger and done a barroom rendition of “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling,” but can he pull off heavy-metal swagger? If you ask Def Leppard, who saw Cruise perform “Pour Some Sugar on Me” for the new film Rock of Ages, it’s mission: accomplished. (Rated PG-13)

Two old friends, two new albums, many reasons to celebrate. Shawn Colvin’s All Fall Down features lilting melodies, rolling guitar riffs, and gritty emotional truths; Mary Chapin Carpenter’s Ashes and Roses showcases some of her most interesting and intimate work yet— nuanced reflections on marriage, memory, memo y, and mortality.

POCKET TRAVELER The Kayak mobile app helps take the stress out of trips by letting you track flights, find a car rental, or snag a last-minute hotel room. (Free; Android, iPad, iPhone, Nokia devices, Windows Mobile 7; for more travel apps, go to Parade.com/trips)

Scan here to download the Kayak mobile app

THE TONIEST AWARDS Here’s why we love the Tonys (CBS, June 10, 8 p.m. ET): live performances by Broadway’s best; generally witty, erudite acceptance speeches; and Neil Patrick Harris, who returns as host.

HIGH ROLLERS

When one of America’s first roller coasters debuted 128 years ago this week at Coney Island, it was called the Gravity Pleasure Switchback Railway and went a thrilling 6 mph. We roll a bit differently these days. The country’s fastest coaster (Kingda Ka, above, at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey) zooms along at 128 mph, and Pennsylvania’s Hersheypark just introduced Skyrush, with winglike seats that make you feel like you’re flying.

DANCE FEVER A sassy series from the creator of Gilmore Girls, Bunheads is about a Vegas showgirl (Sutton Foster) who shares her expertise with students at a small-town dance school. (ABC Family, June 11, 9 p.m. ET)

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: DAVID JAMES/NEW LINE PRODUCTIONS; DREAMWORKS ANIMATION LLC; CBS; ANDREW ECCLES/ABC FAMILY VIA GETTY IMAGES; STAN HONDA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

MADAGASCAR 3

Hot off a premiere at the Cannes film festival, the lovable zoo crew is back, heading toward New York by way of a circus traveling through Europe. Martin Short and Frances McDormand are among the stars voicing new characters, and the 3-D action is sure to generate some three-ring mayhem. (Rated PG)

4 • June 10, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


The CDC now also recommends routine vaccination for boys 11–12 years old.

Manner Up! Modern etiquette made easy

Boys can be affected by HPV disease too. GARDASIL HELPS PROTECT BOTH YOUR SON AND DAUGHTER.

Q: My wife and I don’t get our hair “done”—we get it “cut.” I spend $8 at the barber shop, and she spends about twice that at a beauty parlor. These are not fancy places, so are we still expected to tip? In both cases the people who cut our hair are the owners. Does that make a difference?

ILLUSTRATION: GRAFILU

—Name withheld, Greenfield, Ind.

A: My general policy in life is “If it moves, tip it”—in this case, “it” being a person who is performing a much-needed service at a very reasonable price. A 20 percent tip at barber shops and salons is standard, whether the price is 8 bucks or 80. And if the cutter is the owner? “People still tip us,” says Kristina Barricelli, co-owner, with her mother and two sisters, of Gemini 14 Color Bar in New York City. “Customers are tipping for the service we perform, regardless of what we may or may not make on the back end.” So be a sport and give the guy who cuts your hair $10 and suggest your wife also add in 20 percent to her service. You’ll both be doing the right thing—and guaranteeing that a little extra attention is paid the next time you’re there. —Judith Newman Send your questions to Parade.com/mannerup

When it comes to human papillomavirus (HPV), females are only half the equation. There are 30 to 40 types of HPV that will affect an estimated 75% to 80% of males and females in their lifetime. For most, HPV clears on its own. But, for others who don’t clear certain types, HPV could cause cervical cancer in females and other types of HPV could cause genital warts in both males and females. And there’s no way to predict who will or won’t clear the virus. GARDASIL is the only HPV vaccine that helps protect against 4 types of HPV. In girls and young women ages 9 to 26, GARDASIL helps protect against 2 types of HPV that cause about 75% of cervical cancer cases, and 2 more types that cause 90% of genital warts cases. In boys and young men ages 9 to 26, GARDASIL helps protect against 90% of genital warts cases. GARDASIL may not fully protect everyone, nor will it protect against diseases caused by other HPV types or against diseases not caused by HPV. GARDASIL does not prevent all types of cervical cancer, so it’s important for women to continue routine cervical cancer screenings. GARDASIL does not treat cervical cancer or genital warts. GARDASIL is given as 3 injections over 6 months.

IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION Anyone who is allergic to the ingredients of GARDASIL, including those severely allergic to yeast, should not receive the vaccine. GARDASIL is not for women who are pregnant. The side effects include pain, swelling, itching, bruising, and redness at the injection site, headache, fever, nausea, dizziness, vomiting, and fainting. Fainting can happen after getting GARDASIL. Sometimes people who faint can fall and hurt themselves. For this reason, your child’s health care professional may ask your child to sit or lie down for 15 minutes after he or she gets GARDASIL. Some people who faint might shake or become stiff. This may require evaluation or treatment by your child’s health care professional. Only a doctor or health care professional can decide if GARDASIL is right for your child. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088. Please read the Patient Information on the next page and discuss it with your child’s doctor or health care professional.

Talk to your child’s doctor about GARDASIL.

to complete MAKE SURE YOU GET ALL 3 DOSES SO THAT YOU GET THE BEST PROTECTION.

gardasil.com

1-800-GARDASIL

Having trouble paying for your Merck medicine? Merck may be able to help. Visit merck.com/merckhelps.

VACC-1019194-0004 03/12

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


USPPI 9883616 Patient Information about ® GARDASIL (pronounced “gard-Ah-sill”) Generic name: [Human Papillomavirus Quadrivalent (Types 6, 11, 16, and 18) Vaccine, Recombinant]

What is GARDASIL? GARDASIL is a vaccine (injection/shot) that is used for girls and women 9 through 26 years of age to help protect against the following diseases caused by Human Papillomavirus (HPV): 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 C 𰃊 ervical cancer 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 V 𰃊 ulvar and vaginal cancers 𰁕 Anal cancer 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 G 𰃊 enital warts 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 P 𰃊 recancerous cervical, vaginal, vulvar, and anal lesions GARDASIL is used for boys and men 9 through 26 years of age to help protect against the following diseases caused by HPV: 𰁕 Anal cancer 𰁕 Genital warts 𰁕 Precancerous anal lesions The diseases listed above have many causes, and GARDASIL only protects against diseases caused by certain kinds of HPV (called Type 6, Type 11, Type 16, and Type 18). Most of the time, these 4 types of HPV are responsible for the diseases listed above. GARDASIL cannot protect you from a disease that is caused by other types of HPV, other viruses, or bacteria. GARDASIL does not treat HPV infection. You cannot get HPV or any of the above diseases from GARDASIL. What important information about GARDASIL should I know? 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 Y 𰃊 ou should continue to get routine cervical cancer screening. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 G 𰃊 ARDASIL may not fully protect everyone who gets the vaccine. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 G 𰃊 ARDASIL will not protect against HPV types that you already have. Who should not get GARDASIL? You should not get GARDASIL if you have, or have had: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 a 𰃊 n allergic reaction after getting a dose of GARDASIL. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 a 𰃊 severe allergic reaction to yeast, amorphous aluminum hydroxyphosphate sulfate, polysorbate 80. What should I tell my health care provider before getting GARDASIL? Tell your health care provider if you: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 a 𰃊 re pregnant or planning to get pregnant. GARDASIL is not recommended for use in pregnant women. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 h 𰃊 ave immune problems, like HIV infection, cancer, or you take medicines that affect your immune system. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 h 𰃊 ave a fever over 100°F (37.8°C). 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 h 𰃊 ad an allergic reaction to another dose of GARDASIL. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 t𰃊ake any medicines, even those you can buy over the counter. Your health care provider will help decide if you should get the vaccine.

Can other vaccines and medications be given at the same time as GARDASIL? GARDASIL can be given at the same time as RECOMBIVAX HB®1 [hepatitis B vaccine (recombinant)] or Menactra [Meningococcal (Groups A, C, Y and W-135) Polysaccharide Diphtheria Toxoid Conjugate Vaccine] and Adacel [Tetanus Toxoid, Reduced Diphtheria Toxoid and Acellular Pertussis Vaccine Adsorbed (Tdap)]. What are the possible side effects of GARDASIL? The most common side effects with GARDASIL are: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 p 𰃊 ain, swelling, itching, bruising, and redness at the injection site 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 h 𰃊 eadache 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 f𰃊 ever 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 n 𰃊 ausea 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 d 𰃊 izziness 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 v 𰃊 omiting 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 f𰃊 ainting There was no increase in side effects when GARDASIL was given at the same time as RECOMBIVAX HB [hepatitis B vaccine (recombinant)]. There was more injection-site swelling at the injection site for GARDASIL when GARDASIL was given at the same time as Menactra [Meningococcal (Groups A, C, Y and W-135) Polysaccharide Diphtheria Toxoid Conjugate Vaccine] and Adacel [Tetanus Toxoid, Reduced Diphtheria Toxoid and Acellular Pertussis Vaccine Adsorbed (Tdap)]. Tell your health care provider if you have any of the following problems because these may be signs of an allergic reaction: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 d 𰃊 ifficulty breathing 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 w 𰃊 heezing (bronchospasm) 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 h 𰃊 ives 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 r𰃊 ash Tell your health care provider if you have: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 s𰃊 wollen glands (neck, armpit, or groin) 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 j𰃊oint pain 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 u 𰃊 nusual tiredness, weakness, or confusion 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 c𰃊 hills 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 g 𰃊 enerally feeling unwell 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 l𰃊eg pain 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 s𰃊 hortness of breath 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 c𰃊 hest pain 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 a 𰃊 ching muscles 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 m 𰃊 uscle weakness 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 s𰃊 eizure 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 b 𰃊 ad stomach ache 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 b 𰃊 leeding or bruising more easily than normal 𰁕 skin infection Contact your health care provider right away if you get any symptoms that concern you, even several months after getting the vaccine.

How is GARDASIL given? GARDASIL is a shot that is usually given in the arm muscle. You will need 3 shots given on the following schedule: 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 D 𰃊 ose 1: at a date you and your health care provider choose. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 D 𰃊 ose 2: 2 months after Dose 1. 𰃊 𰁕𰃊 D 𰃊 ose 3: 6 months after Dose 1.

For a more complete list of side effects, ask your health care provider.

Fainting can happen after getting GARDASIL. Sometimes people who faint can fall and hurt themselves. For this reason, your health care provider may ask you to sit or lie down for 15 minutes after you get GARDASIL. Some people who faint might shake or become stiff. This may require evaluation or treatment by your health care provider.

This leaflet is a summary of information about GARDASIL. If you would like more information, please talk to your health care provider or visit www.gardasil.com.

Make sure that you get all 3 doses on time so that you get the best protection. If you miss a dose, talk to your health care provider.

Issued April 2011

1

What are the ingredients in GARDASIL? The ingredients are proteins of HPV Types 6, 11, 16, and 18, amorphous aluminum hydroxyphosphate sulfate, yeast protein, sodium chloride, L-histidine, polysorbate 80, sodium borate, and water for injection.

Manufactured and Distributed by: Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. Whitehouse Station, NJ 08889, USA

Registered trademark of Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. Copyright © 2006, 2009 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. All rights reserved

VACC-1019194-0004 03/12

Ask Marilyn By Marilyn vos Savant When I was chatting with a 110-pound friend and her 220-pound husband, the subject of over-the-counter medications arose. Should one vary dosages according to weight? —Karen Zocchi, Beaverton, Ore.

No. If drug studies had shown this to be a safe and effective way to dose, the directions would specifically state so. Labeling requirements are strict. That said, if dosages are described as ranges (one or two tablets, four to six hours, etc.), you may want to vary them. For instance, if you have bothersome side effects, you may decide to decrease the dose. Or you may try increasing it (within the indicated range) to get more benefit. Adult drug studies start with safe dosages based on many considerations, and body size (which doesn’t mean simply weight) is among them. Yet a major factor is the way organ systems transform the chemical compounds and later clear them from the body. In children, these systems are immature and may be much smaller, so body size is more significant. This is why pediatric dosages are often based on weight. (For similar reasons, veterinarians may weigh animals before prescribing drugs.) Still, many drugs for adults are indeed prescribed by weight or body surface area, etc. In those cases, other factors, such as the amount of adipose (fatty) tissue, are more relevant.

ILLUSTRATION: GRAFILU

Read this information with care before getting GARDASIL.1 You (the person getting GARDASIL) will need 3 doses of the vaccine. It is important to read this leaflet when you get each dose. This leaflet does not take the place of talking with your health care provider about GARDASIL.

6 • June 10, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


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DIVE OUR GUIDE IN! Cover and opening photographs BY P E T E R YA NG

To

SUMMER’S

HOTTEST READS Plus ‘CASTLE’ STAR

Nathan Fillion REVEALS WHY HE’S HOOKED ON BOOKS SAMPLE THE NEW RICHARD CASTLE MYSTERY! To read an exclusive excerpt from the e-book original A Raging Storm, due in July, go to Parade.com/castle

SEE VIDEO OF NATHAN AT THE SHOOT The star talks about his series, his fans, and his summer travel plans at Parade.com/fillion

as the son of two high school English teachers, Nathan Fillion learned early on that books possess magical qualities. For one thing, they can stop a clock. “Whatever our bedtime was as kids, we could stay up an extra half hour if we were reading. My parents didn’t care as long as I was under the spell of a Stephen King or a Douglas Adams,” recalls Fillion, who now plays a writer himself— mystery novelist–turned–crime solver Richard Castle—on ABC’s comedy-drama Castle. Those late nights growing up in Edmonton, Canada, got Fillion addicted. “Now I read in bed. I read at work. I read standing in line,” he says. “It’s like, ‘Hello, my name is Nathan and I am a reader.’ ” To maintain his habit, the 41-year-old actor keeps digital books on his smartphone and tablet, and the old-fashioned kind everywhere else. “I still buy actual books,” he says, holding up a worn paperback of Jaws and bringing it to his face with a deep inhale. “The smell, having it in your hands—there’s really no substitute.” What’s remarkable is that Fillion finds time to read anything other than scripts. Castle wrapped its fourth season with a steamy cliff-hanger in which his character finally hooked up with Kate Beckett (played by Stana Katic), the detective he’s flirted with for years. Fillion’s not sure what romance will do for the couple’s chemistry next season. “I imagine there’s going to be a honeymoon phase, and then a honeymoon’s-over phase, where it’s like, ‘Can you pass me the remote?’ ” He laughs. “And then they’ll be fighting: ‘You watch too much TV.’ ‘You’re always cleaning your gun.’ Typical

8 • June 10, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


Nathan’s Favorite Reads Close to Shore: A True Story of Terror in an Age of Innocence by Michael Capuzzo “I love reading about shark attacks,” Fillion says about this reallife chronicle of a Jaws-like rampage on the New Jersey coast in 1916. “That stuff fascinates me. A book that can make you afraid? I love it.”

World War Z

Ice s tin y. of rie ar ntl ng e se . R. M rece ys my e o A S d Fir rge R these o pla ot m es, an Geo ead , wh tle, g hron e

by ust r uinn Cas of T am me “I j lly Q er on ame . [A G volu .] Mo ught O’s G illing first ries da o HB s thr the sy se int ich i es is anta d.” wh Thron in’s f orte of Mart ansp in as tr Iw

by Max Brooks “I like postapocalyptic anything,” says Fillion of this novel about a war between humans and zombies. “I like the idea of, how do you make your way when the whole society collapses? World War Z makes it very, very real. It’s a really well-thought-out book.”

The Spenser detective novels by Robert B. Parker “Spenser’s supertough, but he’s not indestructible. He’s got just the right amount of macho. If they remake that TV series [Spenser: For Hire, in which Robert Urich starred in the 1980s], I’d be interested. That’d be cool.”

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Fillion is a cofounder of Kids Need to Read, which provides books for schools, libraries, and literacy programs. Go to kidsneedtoread.org for more information.

Meet the Author of

THE PARIS WIFE You could win a dinner with best-selling novelist Paula McLain for you and four friends in your hometown. No purchase necessary. To enter and for official rules, go to Parade.com/paris.

2012 The

Location, Location ... TAKING A TRIP? THESE GREAT READS WILL HELP CAPTURE THE VIBE OF YOUR DESTINATION.

READING GUIDE

You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll never look at livestock the same way again. These 10 picks top the season’s list of page-turners.

NONFICTION

GOING TO ... NEW ENGLAND? TRY: Seating Arrangements by Maggie Shipstead A wedding held at a family retreat off the New England coast explodes into a weekend of deliciously scandalous behavior.

Cronkite Douglas Brinkley There was a time when no American could imagine TV without Walter Cronkite, the eminently trusted news anchor who told the world of President Kennedy’s death and Neil Armstrong’s leap into moondust. The source of his appeal? According to Cronkite, “I feel people should know about the world, should know the truth as much as possible. … Maybe that comes across.” In historian Brinkley’s biography, it’s broadcast loud and clear.

GOING TO ... THE MID-ATLANTIC COAST? TRY: The Right-Hand Shore by Christopher Tilghman A man’s attempt to secure his family’s Chesapeake Bay estate from a dying cousin in the 1920s leads to the discovery of age-old secrets.

midwesterner reflects wistfully on a lifetime of summers spent at her family’s 83-yearold cabin retreat in the Wisconsin woods.

GOING TO ... THE DESERT? TRY: Come in and Cover Me by Gin Phillips Guided by ghosts, an archaeologist in New Mexico finds herself not only in a new relationship but on the cusp of what may be the most important discovery of her career.

Insanely Simple Ken Segall While the late Steve Jobs may have been a complicated personality, his philosophy for Apple was to keep it simple, stupid. In this slim volume, the former ad exec who handled the Apple account shares lessons that demonstrate this guiding principle, learned from the master himself. Laced with elucidating examples (like the story of the iconic iPod “silhouette” campaign), this thought-provoking read reveals the method to the madman’s success.

Let’s Pretend This Never Happened Jenny Lawson Take one part David Sedaris and two parts Chelsea Handler and

GOING TO... THE NORTHERN LAKES? TRY: Return to Wake Robin by Marnie O. Mamminga The native

GOING TO ... THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST? TRY: Truth Like the Sun by Jim Lynch A reporter new to Seattle becomes part of the story when she finds herself drawn to an influential mayoral candidate.

you’ll have some inkling of the cockeyed humor of Jenny Lawson, a.k.a. the Bloggess. Whether she’s recounting the day she got her arm stuck inside a cow or the time her daughter’s diaper exploded in a public swimming pool, Lawson, whose blog averages 2 to 3 million page views a month, flaunts the sort of fearless

GOING TO ... THE WEST? TRY: Wild by Cheryl Strayed In this gripping memoir, a woman hikes 1,100 miles solo along the Pacific Crest Trail—from California’s Mojave Desert to Washington State—to repair her broken life.

GOING TO … THE SOUTH? TRY: A Land More Kind Than Home by Wiley Cash When a young boy glimpses something he shouldn’t in his small North Carolina town, he puts his life— and his brother’s—in real danger.

BON VOYAGE! For other great regional book recommendations, go to Parade.com/read

comedic chops that will make you spurt Diet Coke through your nose.

Yes, Chef Marcus Samuelsson Like the food this Top Chef winner is famous for, Marcus Samuelsson’s background is a multi-

BOOKS PHOTOGRAPHED BY LUIS ERNESTO SANTANA. COVER AND INSIDE: GROOMING, ROSIE JOHNSTON; STYLING, LEESA EVANS FOR THE MAGNET AGENCY; PROP STYLING, MICHAEL GREEN. ILLUSTRATIONS: MARIE ASSÉNAT

relationship stuff.” Snappy dialogue comes naturally to the actor, whose parents, especially his mom, trained him early to read “cold,” as he puts it. “Being able to read something aloud with feeling the first time you looked at it was very important,” he says. “Now if I see an adult who reads aloud in a monotone, I say to myself, ‘Your mother failed you.’ ” Fillion’s favorite books are a fitting selection for an actor who has earned serious cult status— just ask his million-plus Twitter followers—playing a superhuman priest on Buffy the Vampire Slayer and a spaceship captain on Firefly and its movie spin-off, Serenity. “I’m the biggest geek of all,” he says. “Adventure, fantasy, comic books—I can’t get enough.” In fact, now it can be told: Comic books in particular helped Fillion keep the lights on as a kid. “You know,” he says, sounding a tad guilty, “some of those summer nights, I’d read great literature. But more than a few times, I’d have a comic book hidden away. Hey, either way, I got to stay up late doing something I loved.” —David Hochman

10 • June 10, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


cultural mélange. Left at an orphanage in Ethiopia, he was adopted by a couple living in Sweden, where he learned to cook at the side of his doting grandmother. But Samuelsson had bigger dreams than mere meatballs, and his memoir takes us on his journey to the pinnacle of his profession in New York and back to his birthplace. Evocative and beautifully written, this book is one to savor. (Due June 24)

God’s Hotel Victoria Sweet When Sweet applied for a job at one of the country’s last almshouses, Laguna Honda Hospital in San Francisco, she had no idea she would stay there for 20 years, tending to patients no other facility wanted while defending the hospital from those bent on turning it into a cog in the corporate machine. Her memoir puts a face to the health care crisis while raising probing questions about the true role of doctors in our society.

FICTION Gold Chris Cleave A trio of best friends and fierce competitors in Olympic-level cycling, Zoe, Kate, and Jack are splendid physical specimens while pedaling furiously in the velodrome, but when their feet are on the ground, they’re just like the rest of us: pretty much a mess. Gold gets the feverish intensity of both elite athletics and everyday life pitch-perfect. (Due July 3)

Capital John Lanchester On London’s tiny Pepys Road, a Pakistani shop owner’s extended family lives cheek-by-jowl with a posh City banker, a 17-yearold Senegalese soccer star, and a withering widow. Lanchester brings

these disparate characters—and many more—to vibrant life, connecting their stories through a hint of menace from the outside world: postcards that arrive saying only, “We want what you have.”

What Dies in Summer Tom Wright Texas teenager Jim gets that tingle—Gram calls it a touch of “the Sight”—after breakfast one day. Sure enough, they find his cousin Lee Ann half-frozen on their porch, unwilling to say a word about why she left home. What none of them know is that by taking her in, they’ve put themselves in a killer’s path. This gripping debut is filled with tenderness and terror.

Bring Up the Bodies Hilary Mantel King Henry VIII is a man who gets what he wants. In Mantel’s extraordinary Wolf Hall, what Henry wanted was witchily seductive Anne Boleyn. But Anne has borne him no son, and, in this even more spellbinding sequel, Henry’s eye has strayed to demure Jane Seymour. It will take a bloodbath and a web of political and sexual conspiracies unmatched in British history for the king to get his heart’s desire this time.

The Newlyweds Nell Freudenberger It’s hard to imagine two worlds more different than Rochester, N.Y., and Bangladesh. So we know there’s culture shock coming when, after a sweet online courtship, George Stillman travels to Dhaka to bring Amina Mazid back to his suburban split-level. With its vivid sense of place and multilayered characters, this beguiling novel examines love and family—and the deeply divergent meanings two people can attach to those deceptively simple words.

WAIT—WE’RE NOT DONE YET! For more summer reads, excerpts from each of our picks, and the latest in paperbacks and audiobooks, go to Parade.com/read 12 • June 10, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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Hydrogen Peroxide for Aches, BOOK Pains and Clogged Arteries? THAT CHANGED MY LIFE The

1. Katie

Couric

HOST OF THE SYNDICATED TALK SHOW KATIE, PREMIERING IN SEPTEMBER

“Katharine Graham’s Personal History is the story of a woman I deeply admire. It takes you through the ebbs and flows of her professional and personal life.” 2. Hugh

Jackman

STAR OF THE UPCOMING FILM LES MISÉRABLES

PHOTOS, FROM TOP: ALO CEBALLOS/FILMMAGIC; CHARLES ESHELMAN/FILMMAGIC; MICHAEL N. TODARO/FILMMAGIC

“When I was 18, I read Hermann Hesse’s novel Siddhartha, and that had a big effect on me. I make myself read it every decade because I get a different perspective every time. It’s a beautiful book.” 3. Donald

Trump

CHAIRMAN AND PRESIDENT OF THE TRUMP ORGANIZATION AND STAR OF NBC’S THE CELEBRITY APPRENTICE

“I read Norman Vincent Peale’s The Power of Positive Thinking when I was quite young, and it left a great impression on me. I agree that a positive outlook and approach to life and business can reap great results.”

For more celebrity reading picks, go to Parade.com/read

2 1

3

(SPECIAL) - Hydrogen peroxide is trusted by every hospital and emergency room in the country for its remarkable ability to kill deadly germs like E. coli. In fact, it has attracted so much interest from doctors that over 6000 articles about it have appeared in scientific publications around the world. Research has discovered that hydrogen peroxide enables your immune system to function properly and fight infection and disease. Doctors have found it can shrink tumors and treat allergies, Alzheimer’s, asthma, clogged arteries, diabetes, digestive problems, migraine headaches, and arthritis pain. Smart consumers nationwide are also discovering there are hundreds of health cures and home remedy uses for hydrogen peroxide. A new book called The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide is now available that tells you exactly how to use hydrogen peroxide by itself... and mixed with simple everyday kitchen items... to make liniments, rubs, lotions, soaks and tonics that treat a wide variety of ailments. It contains tested and proven health cures that do everything from relieving chronic pain to making age spots go away. You’ll be amazed to see how a little hydrogen peroxide mixed with a pinch of this or that from your cupboard can: 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁌𰁉𰁅𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁁𰁒𰁔𰁈𰁒𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁒𰁈𰁅𰁕𰁍𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁓𰁍𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁆𰁉𰁂𰁒𰁏𰁍𰁙𰁁𰁌𰁇𰁉𰁁 𰁳𰀀 𰀴𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁔𰁈𰁌𰁅𰁔𰁅𰀇𰁓𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁏𰁔 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁒𰀀 𰁕𰁐𰀀 𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁅𰁒𰁇𰁉𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁕𰁓𰀀 problems 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁏𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁒𰁏𰁁𰁔𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀦𰁉𰁇𰁈𰁔𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁌𰁄𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁆𰁌𰁕 𰁳𰀀 𰀨𰁅𰁌𰁐𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁂𰁏𰁉𰁌𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁋𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀷𰁈𰁉𰁔𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁔𰁅𰁅𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁔𰀀𰁓𰁐𰁅𰁎𰁄𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁁𰀀 𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁔𰁕𰁎𰁅𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀤𰁅𰁓𰁔𰁒𰁏𰁙𰀀 𰁈𰁁𰁒𰁍𰁆𰁕𰁌𰀀 𰁄𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁌𰀀 𰁂𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁁𰀀 and heal gingivitis 𰁳𰀀 𰀨𰁅𰁌𰁐𰀀 𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀀 𰁃𰁏𰁌𰁄𰀀 𰁓𰁏𰁒𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁃𰁁𰁎𰁋𰁅𰁒𰀀 sores 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁒𰀀𰁕𰁐𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁎𰁁𰁉𰁌𰀀𰁆𰁕𰁎𰁇𰁕𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁌𰁉𰁅𰁖𰁅𰀀 𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀 𰁓𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁐𰁁𰁉𰁎𰀀 𰁏𰁆𰀀 insect bites 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁏𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁆𰁅𰁅𰁔𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁌𰁉𰁅𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁅𰁁𰁒𰀀𰁁𰁃𰁈𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁏𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁍𰁕𰁓𰁃𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁃𰁈𰁅𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀥𰁎𰁁𰁂𰁌𰁅𰀀 𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰁗𰁏𰁕𰁎𰁄𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁃𰁕𰁔𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁓𰁃𰁒𰁁𰁐𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁆𰁁𰁓𰁔𰁅𰁒

𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁆𰁒𰁅𰁓𰁈𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁏𰁎𰁅𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁓𰁋𰁉𰁎 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁒𰀀 𰁕𰁐𰀀 𰁁𰁃𰁎𰁅𰀌𰀀 𰁒𰁁𰁓𰁈𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁁𰁇𰁅𰀀 spots 𰁳𰀀 𰀨𰁅𰁌𰁐𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁙𰁅𰁁𰁓𰁔𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀡𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁍𰁕𰁃𰁈𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅 Besides killing E. coli, hydrogen peroxide also destroys botulism, salmonella and other harmful organisms. It works by making viruses and bacteria self-destruct on the cellular level. Amazingly, for something so powerful, hydrogen peroxide is safe. That’s because after it makes germs self-destruct, hydrogen peroxide breaks down into harmless water. The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide book is a valuable health improvement treasure that also shows you how to make tons of household cleaners that work better and more economically than expensive store-bought products. It’s a safe powerful alternative to harsh chemical cleaners. Discover easy-tomake formulas that: 𰁳𰀀 𰀫𰁉𰁌𰁌𰀀 𰁇𰁅𰁒𰁍𰁓𰀀 𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁋𰁉𰁔𰁃𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀 𰁃𰁏𰁕𰁎𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁒𰁆𰁁𰁃𰁅𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁌𰁉𰁚𰁅𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁈𰁅𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁋𰁉𰁔𰁃𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀 𰁕𰁔𰁅𰁎𰁓𰁉𰁌𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀭𰁁𰁋𰁅𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁐𰁏𰁗𰁅𰁒𰁆𰁕𰁌𰀀𰁓𰁃𰁏𰁕𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁐𰁏𰁗𰁄𰁅𰁒𰀀 𰁔𰁈𰁁𰁔𰀀 𰁗𰁏𰁒𰁋𰁓𰀀 𰁗𰁏𰁎𰁄𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁋𰁉𰁔𰁃𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀 𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁋𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁆𰁒𰁉𰁇𰁅𰁒𰁁𰁔𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁏𰁖𰁅𰁎𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀤𰁉𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁄𰁅𰁏𰁄𰁏𰁒𰁉𰁚𰁅𰀀 𰁃𰁏𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁅𰀀 𰁍𰁁𰁋𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁔𰁅𰁁𰀀 𰁐𰁏𰁔𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁂𰁌𰁅𰁎𰁄𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁆𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁃𰁅𰁓𰁓𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁁𰁎𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁚𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁔𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁂𰁏𰁁𰁒𰁄𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁗𰁏𰁏𰁄𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁓𰁐𰁏𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁎𰀀 𰁏𰁕𰁔𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀 𰁃𰁌𰁏𰁇𰁇𰁅𰁄𰀀 drains 𰁳𰀀 𰀭𰁁𰁋𰁅𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁒𰁄𰁗𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁆𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁔𰁉𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁆𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁇𰁒𰁏𰁕𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁏𰁌𰁅𰁕𰁍𰀀𰁇𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁍 𰁳𰀀 𰀧𰁅𰁔𰀀 𰁒𰁉𰁄𰀀 𰁏𰁆𰀀 𰁈𰁁𰁒𰁍𰁆𰁕𰁌𰀀 𰁂𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁁𰀀 𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁆𰁒𰁕𰁉𰁔𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁖𰁅𰁇𰁅𰁔𰁁𰁂𰁌𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀 𰁔𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁓𰁁𰁆𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁅𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁓𰁅𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀥𰁌𰁉𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁁𰁔𰁅𰀀 𰁎𰁁𰁓𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁅𰁓𰁓𰀀 𰁆𰁒𰁏𰁍𰀀 𰁔𰁏𰁉𰁌𰁅𰁔𰀀 𰁂𰁏𰁗𰁌𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁂𰁁𰁔𰁈𰀀 𰁔𰁕𰁂𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁗𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁗𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁒𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁌𰁉𰁚𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁐𰁕𰁒𰁉𰁆𰁙𰀀𰁔𰁏𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁂𰁒𰁕𰁓𰁈𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁄𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁕𰁒𰁅𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁔𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁍𰁏𰁖𰁅𰀀 𰁍𰁏𰁌𰁄𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁍𰁉𰁌𰁄𰁅𰁗𰀀 𰁆𰁒𰁏𰁍𰀀 𰁂𰁁𰁓𰁅𰁍𰁅𰁎𰁔𰀀 𰁗𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁒𰁏𰁏𰁆𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀 𰁓𰁕𰁒𰁆𰁁𰁃𰁅𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀤𰁉𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀 𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁐𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀌𰀀 𰁐𰁁𰁃𰁉𰁆𰁉𰁅𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁂𰁁𰁂𰁙𰀀𰁔𰁏𰁙𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁅𰁍𰁏𰁖𰁅𰀀 𰁗𰁉𰁎𰁅𰀌𰀀 𰁉𰁎𰁋𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁂𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀 𰁓𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰁓𰀀𰁆𰁒𰁏𰁍𰀀𰁃𰁌𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀌𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁒𰁐𰁅𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁆𰁕𰁒𰁎𰁉𰁔𰁕𰁒𰁅 𰁳𰀀 𰀢𰁏𰁏𰁓𰁔𰀀 𰁌𰁁𰁕𰁎𰁄𰁒𰁙𰀀 𰁄𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁇𰁅𰁎𰁔𰀀 𰁐𰁏𰁗𰁅𰁒𰀀

and restore brightness and color 𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁆𰁁𰁂𰁒𰁉𰁃𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁋𰀍𰁆𰁒𰁅𰁅𰀍𰁃𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁎𰀀 𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀 𰁗𰁉𰁎𰁄𰁏𰁗𰁓𰀀 and mirrors 𰁳𰀀 𰀥𰁌𰁉𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁁𰁔𰁅𰀀 𰁓𰁋𰁕𰁎𰁋𰀀 𰁓𰁔𰁅𰁎𰁃𰁈𰀀 𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁐𰁅𰁔𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁆𰁏𰁕𰁌𰀀 𰁏𰁄𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀀 𰁆𰁒𰁏𰁍𰀀 𰁌𰁉𰁔𰁔𰁅𰁒𰀀 𰁂𰁏𰁘𰁅𰁓𰀌𰀀 old tennis shoes, etc. 𰁳𰀀 𰀲𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁒𰁁𰁓𰁉𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁂𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁁 𰁳𰀀 𰀭𰁁𰁋𰁅𰀀 𰁉𰁎𰁄𰁏𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁏𰁕𰁔𰁄𰁏𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰁐𰁌𰁁𰁎𰁔𰁓𰀀 𰁆𰁌𰁏𰁕𰁒𰁉𰁓𰁈𰀀 𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀 𰁁𰀀 𰁓𰁕𰁒𰁅𰁆𰁉𰁒𰁅𰀀 𰁆𰁅𰁒𰁔𰁉𰁌𰁉𰁚𰁅𰁒𰀀 and insecticide all rolled-into-one 𰁳𰀀 𰀫𰁅𰁅𰁐𰀀 𰁈𰁁𰁎𰁄𰁓𰀀 𰁇𰁅𰁒𰁍𰀍𰁆𰁒𰁅𰁅𰀀 𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁔𰀀 𰁅𰁘𰁐𰁅𰁎𰁓𰁉𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁁𰁎𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁚𰁅𰁒𰁓 𰁳𰀀 𰀡𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁍𰁕𰁃𰁈𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅 The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide contains many more amazing health remedies, cleaning formulas and gardening mixtures. In addition, it also gives you a list of qualified physicians who use hydrogen peroxide in their practices to treat serious ailments. Also included FREE with each book are useful tips and home remedy formulas using vinegar, garlic baking soda and teas. To get your copy of The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide direct from the publisher at the special introductory price of $19.95 plus $3.98 shipping and handling (total of $23.93, OH residents please add 6.25% sales tax) simply do this: Write “Hydrogen Peroxide” on a piece of paper and mail it along with your check or money order payable to: James Direct, Inc., Dept HP305, 500 S. Prospect Ave., Box 980, Hartville, Ohio 44632. You can charge to your Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express by mail. Be sure to include your card number, expiration date and signature. Want to save even more? Do a favor for a relative or friend and order two books for only $30 postpaid. Remember, you’re protected by our 90-day money back guarantee. If you’re not happy, for any reason, we’ll refund your money. Simple as that. 𰀦𰀲𰀥𰀥𰀀𰀧𰀩𰀦𰀴𰀁 You will also receive a copy of the handy booklet “How To Grow, Dry, Use & Prepare Herbs” as our gift to you. Even if you return the book, it is yours to keep with no obligation. Hurry! Supplies are limited so you ©2012 JDI HP115S02 must act now. http://www.jamesdirect.com

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


BOOK The

THAT CHANGED MY LIFE 1. Piers

Morgan

HOST OF CNN’S PIERS MORGAN TONIGHT

“An Evil Cradling by Brian Keenan. He was kidnapped in Beirut and wrote about living in horrible tiny, hot, grubby cells for nearly five years, chained to a radiator. While I was reading it, I thought, ‘I’m never going to complain about anything ever again.’ I still complain, but I try to temper it.” 2. Miranda

Lambert

COUNTRY MUSIC STAR

“I loved The Hunger Games. It’s universal, makes you think, and keeps you on your toes!” 3. Aaron

Sorkin

“The Catcher in the Rye, but my runner-up is The Bonfire of the Vanities. [It is] this perfect snapshot of a moment in time. Tom Wolfe has a way of taking characters that have nothing to do with each other and making them crash into each other. That’s something I’ve always wanted to try.”

For more celebrity reading picks, go to Parade.com/read

1 2

3

PHOTOS, FROM TOP: GARY GERSHOFF/WIREIMAGE; JEROD HARRIS/FILMMAGIC; DAN MACMEDAN/WIREIMAGE

CREATOR OF HBO’S THE NEWSROOM PREMIERING JUNE 24

14 • June 10, 2012

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Paula and Shawn Managing type 2 diabetes with Victoza®

Eatting riight and staying active he elped me see diabetes in a new liight. So did asking about non n-insulin Victoza®. Like Paula Deen, I’m helping manage my diabetes by taking walks and eating smaller portions. I also asked my doctor about Victoza®. Here’s what I learned: Victoza® starts to lower blood sugar in as soon as two weeks, lowers A1C,* and keeps it down† Victoza® comes in a prefilled Pen I use just once a day, any time, so it fits into my busy life While not a weight-loss product, Victoza® may help me lose some weight

Ask your doctor how Victoza® can help you better manage your diabetes, too. Visit victoza.com or call 1-866-821-7406 to learn more.

Non-insulin 𰁴 Once-daily *Victoza® 1.8 mg, taken alone or in combination with diabetes pills, lowered A1C by 1.0 to 1.5 points, on average, as shown in medical studies. † Victoza® has been shown to keep A1C down in a 2-year medical study.

Individual results may vary.

Indications and Usage Victoza® (liraglutide [rDNA origin] injection) is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar (glucose) in adults with type 2 diabetes when used along with diet and exercise. Victoza® is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes. Victoza® is not a substitute for insulin and has not been studied in combination with prandial (meal-time) insulin. Victoza® is not for people with type 1 diabetes or people with diabetic ketoacidosis. It is not known if Victoza® is safe and effective in children. Victoza® is not recommended for use in children. Important Safety Information In animal studies, Victoza® caused thyroid tumors—including thyroid cancer— in some rats and mice. It is not known whether Victoza® causes thyroid tumors or a type of thyroid cancer called medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) in people, which may be fatal if not detected and treated early. Do not use Victoza® if you or any of your family members have a history of MTC or if you have Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2). While taking Victoza®, tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, hoarseness, trouble swallowing, or shortness of breath. These may be symptoms of thyroid cancer. Do not use Victoza® if you are allergic to liraglutide or any of the ingredients in Victoza®. Serious allergic reactions can happen with Victoza®. If symptoms of serious allergic reactions occur, stop taking Victoza® and seek medical attention. Inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis) may be severe and lead to death. Before taking Victoza®, tell your doctor if you have had pancreatitis, gallstones, a history of alcoholism, or high blood triglyceride levels since these medical conditions make you more likely to get pancreatitis. Stop taking Victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have pain in your stomach area that is severe and will not go away, occurs with or without vomiting, or is felt going from your stomach area through to your back. These may be symptoms of pancreatitis.

Before using Victoza®, tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, especially sulfonylurea medicines or insulin, as taking them with Victoza® may affect how each medicine works. If you use Victoza® with insulin, you may give both injections in the same body area (for example, your stomach area), but not right next to each other. Also tell your doctor if you have severe stomach problems such as slowed emptying of your stomach (gastroparesis) or problems with digesting food; have or have had kidney or liver problems; have any other medical conditions; or are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. Tell your doctor if you are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. It is unknown if Victoza® will harm your unborn baby or if Victoza® passes into your breast milk. Your risk for getting hypoglycemia, or low blood sugar, is higher if you take Victoza® with another medicine that can cause low blood sugar, such as a sulfonylurea or insulin. The dose of your sulfonylurea medicine or insulin may need to be lowered while taking Victoza®. Victoza® may cause nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea leading to dehydration, which may cause kidney failure. This can happen in people who have never had kidney problems before. Drinking plenty of fluids may reduce your chance of dehydration. The most common side effects with Victoza® include headache, nausea, and diarrhea. Nausea is most common when first starting Victoza®, but decreases over time in most people. Immune system-related reactions, including hives, were more common in people treated with Victoza® compared to people treated with other diabetes drugs in medical studies.

Please see Brief Summary of Important Patient Information on next page. If you need assistance with prescription drug costs, help may be available. Visit pparx.org or call 1-888-4PPA-NOW. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088. Victoza® is a registered trademark of Novo Nordisk A/S. © 2012 Novo Nordisk 0412-00008475-1 May 2012

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This is a BRIEF SUMMARY of important information about Victoza®. This information does not take the place of talking with your doctor about your medical condition or your treatment. If you have any questions about Victoza®, ask your doctor. Only your doctor can determine if Victoza® is right for you. WARNING During the drug testing process, the medicine in Victoza® caused rats and mice to develop tumors of the thyroid gland. Some of these tumors were cancers. It is not known if Victoza® will cause thyroid tumors or a type of thyroid cancer called medullary thyroid cancer (MTC) in people. If MTC occurs, it may lead to death if not detected and treated early. Do not take Victoza® if you or any of your family members have MTC, or if you have Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 (MEN 2). This is a disease where people have tumors in more than one gland in the body.

What are the side effects of Victoza®? 𰁳𰀀 𰀴𰁅𰁌𰁌𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰁔𰁈𰁃𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁖𰁉𰁄𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁉𰁆𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁇𰁅𰁔𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁌𰁕𰁍𰁐𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰁓𰁗𰁅𰁌𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁎𰁅𰁃𰁋𰀌𰀀𰁈𰁏𰁁𰁒𰁓𰁅𰁎𰁅𰁓𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁏𰁕𰁂𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁗𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁏𰁗𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀌𰀀 𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁒𰁔𰁎𰁅𰁓𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁂𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁉𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁁𰁋𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀎𰀀 𰀴𰁈𰁅𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁙𰁍𰁐𰁔𰁏𰁍𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁙𰁒𰁏𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁅𰁒𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀴𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁓𰁔𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁓𰁉𰁄𰁅𰀀𰁅𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁐𰁏𰁒𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁓𰁔𰀀 𰀕𰀅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁏𰁃𰁃𰁕𰁒𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀 𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁍𰁏𰁎𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁐𰁌𰁁𰁃𰁅𰁂𰁏𰀀𰀈𰁁𰀀 𰁎𰁏𰁎𰀍𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁊𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁕𰁄𰁙𰀀𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁃𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁉𰁁𰁌𰁓𰀉𰀀 𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁄𰁁𰁃𰁈𰁅𰀌𰀀𰁎𰁁𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁁𰀌𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁒𰁒𰁈𰁅𰁁𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁍𰁍𰁕𰁎𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁙𰁓𰁔𰁅𰁍𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁌𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁃𰁌𰁕𰁄𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁈𰁉𰁖𰁅𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁗𰁅𰁒𰁅𰀀 𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰀈𰀐𰀎𰀘𰀅𰀉𰀀 What is Victoza® used for? 𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁁𰁒𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁇𰁌𰁕𰁃𰁁𰁇𰁏𰁎𰀍𰁌𰁉𰁋𰁅𰀍𰁐𰁅𰁐𰁔𰁉𰁄𰁅𰀍𰀑𰀀𰀈𰀧𰀬𰀰𰀍𰀑𰀉𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁃𰁅𰁐𰁔𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰀈𰀐𰀎𰀔𰀅𰀉𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁃𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁉𰁁𰁌𰁓𰀎𰀀 𰁁𰁇𰁏𰁎𰁉𰁓𰁔𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁉𰁍𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁂𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁇𰁁𰁒𰀀𰀈𰁇𰁌𰁕𰁃𰁏𰁓𰁅𰀉𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁒𰁏𰁌𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀴𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁓𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁓𰁉𰁄𰁅𰀀𰁅𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁔𰁅𰀎𰀀𰀹𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁌𰁔𰁈𰀀 𰁁𰁄𰁕𰁌𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁔𰁙𰁐𰁅𰀀𰀒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁌𰁌𰁉𰁔𰁕𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀 𰁃𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁆𰁅𰁓𰁓𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁃𰁕𰁓𰁓𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁔𰁅𰀀 𰁄𰁉𰁅𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁅𰁘𰁅𰁒𰁃𰁉𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁇𰁒𰁁𰁍𰀎𰀀 𰁌𰁉𰁓𰁔𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁓𰁉𰁄𰁅𰀀𰁅𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁃𰁃𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀎𰀀 ® 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁 𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁬𰁒𰁓𰁔𰀀𰁃𰁈𰁏𰁉𰁃𰁅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀 𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁃𰁉𰁎𰁅𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀎𰀀 What should I know about taking Victoza® with other medications? 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁕𰁄𰁉𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁍𰁉𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁄𰁁𰁔𰁁𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀 𰁈𰁉𰁓𰁔𰁏𰁒𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀀𰀈𰁉𰁎𰁭𰁁𰁍𰁍𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁓𰀉𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁓𰁌𰁏𰁗𰁓𰀀𰁅𰁍𰁐𰁔𰁙𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁏𰁍𰁁𰁃𰁈𰀎𰀀𰀴𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀 𰀴𰁈𰁅𰁒𰁅𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀌𰀀𰁉𰁔𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁓𰀎𰀀 𰁉𰁍𰁐𰁁𰁃𰁔𰀀𰁈𰁏𰁗𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁂𰁏𰁄𰁙𰀀𰁁𰁂𰁓𰁏𰁒𰁂𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀 𰁔𰁁𰁋𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁂𰁙𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁕𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁁𰁍𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁉𰁍𰁅𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁔𰁙𰁐𰁅𰀀𰀑𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁍𰁅𰁌𰁌𰁉𰁔𰁕𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁉𰁃𰀀𰁋𰁅𰁔𰁏𰁁𰁃𰁉𰁄𰁏𰁓𰁉𰁓𰀎𰀀 Can Victoza® be used in people with kidney or liver 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁔𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁋𰁎𰁏𰁗𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁆𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁓𰁁𰁆𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁅𰁆𰁆𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀 problems? 𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁁𰁌𰁔𰁉𰁍𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁓𰁕𰁌𰁉𰁎𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁕𰁄𰁉𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁍𰁉𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁄𰁁𰁔𰁁𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀 ® 𰁋𰁉𰁄𰁎𰁅𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁖𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁂𰁌𰁅𰁍𰁓𰀎𰀀 Who should not use Victoza ? ® 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁 𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁒𰁓𰁏𰁎𰁁𰁌𰀀 Still have questions? 𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁆𰁁𰁍𰁉𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁈𰁉𰁓𰁔𰁏𰁒𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰀭𰀴𰀣𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰀭𰀥𰀮𰀒𰀎 𰀴𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁎𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁍𰁍𰁁𰁒𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁉𰁍𰁐𰁏𰁒𰁔𰁁𰁎𰁔𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁍𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀎𰀀𰀡𰁓𰁋𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁓𰁅𰁖𰁅𰁒𰁅𰀀 𰁄𰁏𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁔𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁄𰁕𰁃𰁔𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁍𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀌𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀 ® 𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁅𰁒𰁇𰁙𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁 𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁉𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁇𰁒𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁓𰀎 𰁳𰀀 𰀣𰁁𰁌𰁌𰀀𰀑𰀍𰀘𰀗𰀗𰀍𰀔𰀶𰀩𰀣𰀴𰀯𰀺𰀡𰀀𰀈𰀑𰀍𰀘𰀗𰀗𰀍𰀔𰀘𰀔𰀍𰀒𰀘𰀖𰀙𰀉𰀀 What is the most important information I should 𰁳𰀀 𰁖𰁉𰁓𰁉𰁔𰀀𰁖𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁𰀎𰁃𰁏𰁍𰀀 know about Victoza®? 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁎𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁉𰁍𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁕𰁄𰁉𰁅𰁓𰀌𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁙𰁒𰁏𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁕𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁓𰀎𰀀 𰀰𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁏𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁕𰁎𰁓𰁅𰁌𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀 𰁒𰁉𰁓𰁋𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰀭𰀴𰀣𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁙𰁍𰁐𰁔𰁏𰁍𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁙𰁒𰁏𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁅𰁒𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁎𰀀𰁃𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁉𰁁𰁌𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁅𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁍𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁓𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀀 𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁁𰁒𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀 Victoza® is a registered trademark of 𰁔𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀎𰀀𰀩𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀 Novo Nordisk A/S. 𰁓𰁕𰁓𰁐𰁅𰁃𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀌𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁐𰁏𰁔𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁉𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁓𰁐𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀 𰀤𰁁𰁔𰁅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰀩𰁓𰁓𰁕𰁅𰀚𰀀𰀡𰁐𰁒𰁉𰁌𰀀𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀒𰀀𰀀 ® 𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁕𰁅𰁄𰀎𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁 𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀 𰀶𰁅𰁒𰁓𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀀𰀔 ® 𰁒𰁅𰁓𰁔𰁁𰁒𰁔𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁉𰁆𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁬𰁒𰁍𰁅𰁄𰀎𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁 𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁕𰁌𰁄𰀀 𰁂𰁅𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁕𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁈𰁉𰁓𰁔𰁏𰁒𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀 𰂥𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀒𰀀𰀮𰁏𰁖𰁏𰀀𰀮𰁏𰁒𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁋𰀀𰀀𰀀 𰀐𰀔𰀑𰀒𰀍𰀐𰀐𰀐𰀐𰀘𰀗𰀗𰀘𰀍𰀑𰀀𰀀𰀀𰀀𰀭𰁁𰁙𰀀𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀒 𰁐𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁓𰀎𰀀

BOOK The

THAT CHANGED MY LIFE 1. Alex

Trebek

HOST OF JEOPARDY!

“I read The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins when I was about 12 and just couldn’t devour the pages fast enough. I was entranced by this mystery novel. That might be what inspired my love of reading.” 2. Karina

Smirnoff

PROFESSIONAL DANCER ON ABC’S DANCING WITH THE STARS

“My favorite book of all time is Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind. I read it when I was a kid—the first two times in Russian, then in English. When you’re a kid growing up in the former Soviet Union, you have this idea of America— this dream—and then you read a book [like this] and you feel as though you’re learning about the core of this country. And Rhett Butler … well, you know! 3. Matthew

Morrison

STAR OF FOX’S GLEE

“It was probably The Little Prince. I always had this great fascination with James Dean, and that was his favorite book.”

For more celebrity reading picks, go to Parade.com/read

3

1

2

PHOTOS, FROM TOP: ROBYN BECK/AFP/GETTYIMAGES; KRIS CONNOR/GETTY IMAGES; ALBERTO E. RODRIGUEZ/WIREIMAGE

Important Patient Information

𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁏𰁕𰁓𰀀𰁌𰁏𰁗𰀀𰁂𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁇𰁁𰁒𰀀𰀈𰁈𰁙𰁐𰁏𰁇𰁌𰁙𰁃𰁅𰁍𰁉𰁁𰀉𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁃𰁃𰁕𰁒𰀀 𰁗𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀 𰁓𰁕𰁃𰁈𰀀𰁁𰁓𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁌𰁆𰁏𰁎𰁙𰁌𰁕𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁉𰁎𰁓𰁕𰁌𰁉𰁎𰀎𰀀𰀴𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁒𰁉𰁓𰁋𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁂𰁅𰀀 𰁒𰁅𰁄𰁕𰁃𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁂𰁙𰀀𰁌𰁏𰁗𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁄𰁏𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁌𰁆𰁏𰁎𰁙𰁌𰁕𰁒𰁅𰁁𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰁉𰁎𰁓𰁕𰁌𰁉𰁎𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁆𰀀𰁓𰁅𰁒𰁉𰁏𰁕𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁌𰁌𰁅𰁒𰁇𰁉𰁃𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀𰀈𰁅𰀎𰁇𰀎𰀌𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁁𰁐𰁈𰁙𰁌𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁃𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁃𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀 𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁗𰁅𰁌𰁌𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀉𰀀𰁏𰁃𰁃𰁕𰁒𰀌𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁕𰁅𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀 𰁓𰁕𰁓𰁐𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁍𰁐𰁔𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁓𰁅𰁅𰁋𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁁𰁄𰁖𰁉𰁃𰁅𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁕𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁎𰁁𰁕𰁓𰁅𰁁𰀌𰀀𰁖𰁏𰁍𰁉𰁔𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀌𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁒𰁒𰁈𰁅𰁁𰀀 𰁌𰁅𰁁𰁄𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁌𰁏𰁓𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁭𰁕𰁉𰁄𰁓𰀀𰀈𰁄𰁅𰁈𰁙𰁄𰁒𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀉𰀎𰀀𰀤𰁅𰁈𰁙𰁄𰁒𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁕𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁋𰁉𰁄𰁎𰁅𰁙𰀀𰁆𰁁𰁉𰁌𰁕𰁒𰁅𰀎𰀀𰀴𰁈𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁐𰁐𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁏𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀 𰁗𰁈𰁏𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁖𰁅𰀀𰁎𰁅𰁖𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁄𰀀𰁋𰁉𰁄𰁎𰁅𰁙𰀀𰁐𰁒𰁏𰁂𰁌𰁅𰁍𰁓𰀀𰁂𰁅𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁅𰀎𰀀 𰀤𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁋𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁙𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁭𰁕𰁉𰁄𰁓𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁙𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁄𰁕𰁃𰁅𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰁒𰀀𰁃𰁈𰁁𰁎𰁃𰁅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀 𰁄𰁅𰁈𰁙𰁄𰁒𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀬𰁉𰁋𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁌𰁌𰀀𰁏𰁔𰁈𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁁𰁂𰁅𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁃𰁁𰁔𰁉𰁏𰁎𰁓𰀌𰀀𰀶𰁉𰁃𰁔𰁏𰁚𰁁®𰀀𰁈𰁁𰁓𰀀𰁎𰁏𰁔𰀀 𰁂𰁅𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁗𰁎𰀀𰁔𰁏𰀀𰁄𰁅𰁃𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁓𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁒𰁉𰁓𰁋𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁌𰁁𰁒𰁇𰁅𰀀𰁂𰁌𰁏𰁏𰁄𰀀𰁖𰁅𰁓𰁓𰁅𰁌𰀀 𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁅𰁁𰁓𰁅𰀀𰀈𰁉𰀎𰁅𰀎𰀀𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁒𰁔𰀀𰁁𰁔𰁔𰁁𰁃𰁋𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁒𰁏𰁋𰁅𰁓𰀉𰀎𰀀

16 • June 10, 2012

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


StayHealthy

What if you could never be kissed?

or even stress. Always get a proper diagnosis from an allergist who’s trained to pinpoint food allergies.

3 Five Things You Didn’t Know About Food Allergies

ILLUSTRATION: GARY TAXALI

1

A little grime could do you good. Between 1997 and 2007, the number of children with food allergies rose 18 percent. The most accepted theory is that our environment has become too sanitized. “Without as many germs to fend off, the immune system may turn against normally harmless things like food proteins,” says Wayne G. Shreffler, M.D., director of the Food Allergy Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and coauthor of Understanding Your Food Allergies and Intolerances.

2

A bad reaction to a food doesn’t always mean an allergy. Symptoms like abdominal pain or diarrhea could

BY THE NUMBERS

15 PERCENTAGE OF AMERICANS WHO REGULARLY WASH THEIR REUSABLE GROCERY BAGS. TO AVOID CROSSCONTAMINATION FROM HARMFUL BACTERIA, CLEAN YOURS FREQUENTLY AND USE SEPARATE BAGS FOR RAW MEATS AND READYTO-EAT FOODS.

Source: The Home Food Safety program

also be caused by a food intolerance (an adverse reaction that, unlike an allergy, isn’t the result of an immune response), an underlying health condition like irritable bowel syndrome,

Boys may be twice as likely to develop allergies as girls. This includes allergies to both foods and other substances, like pollen. Experts aren’t sure exactly why boys are more susceptible, though some suspect male sex hormones may be to blame.

4

Food allergies can appear suddenly—even in adulthood. Adults who become allergic to foods, often ones they’re not eating regularly, usually already have some other allergy, like hay fever. The most common sources of allergies in adults: peanuts, tree nuts, and shellfish.

5

And they can disappear just as suddenly. Most children with food allergies, especially to milk, soy, wheat, and eggs, outgrow them by age 5. Unfortunately, allergies to shellfish, peanuts, and other nuts often last a lifetime, so adult-onset allergies are less likely to go away. —Karen Asp

Your one gifft can n curre this child in 45 minutes.

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Smile Train is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit recognized by the IRS, and all donations to Smile Train are tax-deductible in accordance with IRS regulations. © 2012 Smile Train.

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


SundayDinner Quite the Catch

Kevin’s Tips

P Keep an eye on

the clock so you don’t overcook. “Drying the fish out is the easiest mistake to make.”

Kevin McKidd, who stars in the upcoming Disney/Pixar film Brave, shares a nourishing childhood favorite from Scotland

The cliché of Scottish cuisine is that everything is deep-fried, but that isn’t always the case. It’s very homey food, and the ingredients are fresh, especially in Moray, where I’m from. It’s farming country, where there’s lots of great root vegetables, meat, and fish. My mum would make this on special occasions, and my dad, brother, and I would do the dishes. The aroma of the pastry would fill the tiny house we lived in. It was lovely. The mixture of the soft salmon and the crispy pastry is so decadent it almost feels like you’re having dessert! My mum recently made it for my kids, Joseph, 11, and Iona, 10, and they ate their plates clean, which is rare. It’s simple, unfussy, and full of flavor. It gives me comfort and reminds me of home.

P Pair with fresh veggies or a green salad, but keep it simple. “Don’t cover the vegetables in sauces. Let their natural flavors ring out.” Feeling naughty? Add fries.

Salmon in Pastry 12 oz puff pastry sheets, (thawed if frozen) 2 (6- to 7-oz) salmon fillets 2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley 2 Tbsp chopped fresh basil 3 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste 1 egg, lightly beaten

1. Preheat oven to 400°F. 2. Using a rolling pin, roll pastry into four pieces, each about 5 by 8 inches. 3. Transfer two pieces to a large baking sheet lined with parchment paper.

4. Remove skin from salmon and place a fillet in center of each of those pieces. 5. In a small bowl, combine parsley, basil, and butter. Stir until herbs are thoroughly mixed in. Season with salt and pepper. Spread butter mixture on top of salmon. 6. Dip a pastry brush into beaten egg and let excess run off. Brush edges of pastry around salmon with egg. Cover each piece with remaining puff pastry.

7. Pinch pastry together firmly to seal, then lightly press tines of a dinner fork along edges for a decorative effect. Brush top of pastry with remaining egg. 8. With a sharp knife, cut two small slits into top of each pastry so steam can escape during baking. 9. Bake for 20 minutes or until pastry has risen and is crisp and golden. SERVES: 2 | PER SERVING:

1,150 calories, 59g carbs, 56g protein, 75g fat, 200mg chol, 1,080mg sodium, 3g fiber

P A white wine like a sauvignon blanc goes well with the dish, though tradition calls for something stronger. “In Scotland, you’d have whiskey with it,” McKidd says, adding: “There, you have whiskey with everything!”

It’s a wrap! We give more recipes (apps, entrées, desserts) the pastry treatment at dashrecipes

.com/puff

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM BOTTOM LEFT: STEWART COOK/REX USA; LUCY SCHAEFFER, FOOD STYLING BY STEPHANA BOTTOM, PROP STYLING BY MICHELLE WONG; ISTOCKPHOTO (3). NUTRITION ANALYSIS/CONSULTING BY JEANINE SHERRY, M.S., R.D.

cle

18 • June 10, 2012

© PARADE Publications 2012. All rights reserved.


summer

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WAVE® MUSIC SYSTEM III

More enjoyment. How did we improve the most highly acclaimed music system in its class? We added even more ease and convenience to its awardwinning sound. New features. The new Wave® music system III now has a digital FM/AM tuner with improved radio reception that also shows artist and station information as you listen. New touch-top controls let you operate basic functions with a simple touch. And in response to feedback from our customers, it now has dual alarms. So you can set two different wake-up times and gently wake up to the music of your choice. Music. As it was meant to be heard. The Wave® music system III reproduces music with the most accuracy we’ve ever produced in a system this small. Hear details you never noticed before. Even in songs you know by heart. Feel low notes come through with fullness and power. Exclusive Bose® waveguide speaker technology is what allows this small system to outperform many larger, more expensive systems.

Music from your iPod,® iPhone,® computer or tablet. In addition to radio and CDs, available accessories let you listen to music from other sources such as an iPod or iPhone, or wirelessly from a tablet or computer. And the compact Wave® music system III fits neatly just about anywhere. So you can enjoy all kinds of music – in all kinds of places. Hear it for yourself, risk-free. We believe the best way for you to appreciate the new Wave® music system III is to experience it in your own home. So call by June 30, 2012, to take advantage of our special, limited-time Audition offer. Hear the Wave® music system III for 90 days, risk-free. And be sure to ask how you can make 12 easy payments, with no interest charges from Bose.* Why wait any longer? Hear for yourself why Bose is the most respected name in sound.

THE BOSE 90-DAY, RISK-FREE AUDITION. FREE shipping to your home.

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1-800-451-9176, ext. TX795 www.Bose.com/WMS

*Bose payment plan available on orders of $299-$1500 paid by major credit card. Separate financing offers may be available for select products. See website for details. Down payment is 1/12 the product price plus applicable tax and shipping charges, charged when your order is shipped. Then, your credit card will be billed for 11 equal monthly installments beginning approximately one month from the date your order is shipped, with 0% APR and no interest charges from Bose. Credit card rules and interest may apply. U.S. residents only. Limit one active financing program per customer. ©2012 Bose Corporation. The distinctive design of the Wave® music system is a registered trademark of Bose Corporation. Financing and Audition offers not to be combined with other offers or applied to previous purchases, and subject to change without notice. Offers valid 5/1/12-6/30/12. Risk-free refers to 90-day Audition only and requires product purchase. Delivery is subject to product availability. iPhone and iPod are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2012.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


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